• Moliere
    6.4k
    Read now.

    So intuitively I was reaching for something like your first link which explicitly uses "impairments" to mean the bodily reality while "disability" is the social reality of disabled persons.

    Nussbaum is always a good read. I found the comparison to contract theorists helpful for differentiating her approach and why there are such-and-such frontiers for justice on that model. I can see calling it a neo-Aristotelian approach -- "capabilities" as a kind of virtue which makes for a eudemon life: though a marked difference is that she is advocating this under a liberal umbrella such that the eudemon life is not only objective, but also universally applicable such that state coercion is justified in obtaining it for everyone.

    Makes me want to learn more...




    Almost always :D -- it's still fun to pontificate and think on my own, though...

    So when I say "social construct" I do not mean that to indicate "not-real", as is commonly thought. I think calling this "relational" works pretty well, too, insofar as we don't stop there. Relational... between what? and what relation? That's where a description of our social conditions can come in to fill in the details.
  • Banno
    29.6k
    Thanks for doing your homework... :wink:

    For what it's wort, the NDIS here differentiates disability/impairment on the one hand form medical issues on the other, using the following criteria:

    1. A disability is permanent.
    2. A disability involves a substantial reduction in functional capacity.
    3. A disability must affect a person’s ability to work, study, or take part in social life, and they must likely need long-term supports.

    The impairment must be functional and permanent and require support. That's very much following the medical model. It reinforces the deficit model, framing disability as a problem for an individual body, not as a disjunction between that body and its environment. It presumes the evaluative place of a "normal" body, an unquestioned baseline. It arbitrarily rejects chronic illness, which would otherwise count as a disability. It ignores lived experience of fluctuating or episodic disability.

    Now my advocacy has been towards a capabilities focus, looking at the valued human capabilities that are restricted, and what supports enable the person to actually realise them. In this framing consideration of the impairment is replaced by consideration of what supports are needed to allow the person to achieve their capabilities. "assistance with daily living" and "mobility supports" changes to "self-care" and "social participation".

    This approach has wide recognition, and underpinned the initial vision of the NDIS, but met opposition in the implementation, the bean-counters not being familiar with capabilities-based metrics. The dynamic between medical and social models is ongoing.

    Given that dynamic, considerations involving critical theory are a long way from the centre of the discussion.
  • Moliere
    6.4k
    Thanks for doing your homework... :wink:Banno

    Heh. You're right I ought to have just read them before replying.

    Now my advocacy has been towards a capabilities focus, looking at the valued human capabilities that are restricted, and what supports enable the person to actually realise them. In this framing consideration of the impairment is replaced by consideration of what supports are needed to allow the person to achieve their capabilities. "assistance with daily living" and "mobility supports" changes to "self-care" and "social participation".

    This approach has wide recognition, and underpinned the initial vision of the NDIS, but met opposition in the implementation, the bean-counters not being familiar with capabilities-based metrics. The dynamic between medical and social models is ongoing.

    Given that dynamic, considerations involving critical theory are a long way from the centre of the discussion.
    Banno

    A long way, sure, though sometimes that's an advantage -- less of a dog in the fight between your approach and the bean counters means a possibility for bridge-building.

    Especially considering that sympathetic ears towards critical theory are likely to be more sympathetic to disability advocates than bean-counters, the currently frustrating deciders of the world.
  • frank
    18.4k

    You have disability insurance through Social Security. It's pretty generous. He's talking about the Australian version of this. The American version has been around since the 1950s.
  • Moliere
    6.4k
    He's talking about the Australian version of this.frank

    I know.

    You have disability insurance through Social Security. It's pretty generousfrank

    1. A disability is permanent.
    2. A disability involves a substantial reduction in functional capacity.
    3. A disability must affect a person’s ability to work, study, or take part in social life, and they must likely need long-term supports.
    Banno

    How would you say it stacks up to the USA's? Looks to be the same in terms of...

    The impairment must be functional and permanent and require support. That's very much following the medical model. It reinforces the deficit model, framing disability as a problem for an individual body, not as a disjunction between that body and its environment. It presumes the evaluative place of a "normal" body, an unquestioned baseline. It arbitrarily rejects chronic illness, which would otherwise count as a disability. It ignores lived experience of fluctuating or episodic disability.Banno
  • frank
    18.4k
    How would you say it stacks up to the USA's? Looks to be the same in terms of...Moliere

    I don't know. Everyone I've ever met who was living "on disability" (receiving SSI payments) was doing pretty well. Now does this mean they'll never have to be humble enough to ask for help? No. This isn't utopia. It's the real world. If you fall out of your power chair you're going to have to ask for help.
  • Moliere
    6.4k
    I don't know. Everyone I've ever met who was living "on disability" (receiving SSI payments) was doing pretty well.frank

    Good.

    So does that mean we ought reject the social model of disability?

    If @frank would say "Everyone I've ever met who was living "on disability" (receiving SSI payments) was doing pretty well" then we ought reject...

    Now my advocacy has been towards a capabilities focus, looking at the valued human capabilities that are restricted, and what supports enable the person to actually realise them.Banno

    ?

    I don't think you mean this, but I do wonder what you're getting at.
  • Banno
    29.6k
    How would you say it stacks up to the USA's?Moliere
    We've sent aid packages to folk we know in the US who have not been able to get the support they need.

    Yeah, I know. Shocking.


    Everyone I've ever met who was living "on disability" (receiving SSI payments) was doing pretty well.frank
    Not what we see, on various international forums for folk with disabilities. The situation is pretty dire.

    And you have a president who openly mocks disability.


    Hey, you guys asked.
  • frank
    18.4k
    We've sent aid packages to folk we know in the US who have not been able to get the support they need.Banno

    You're such a compassionate person Banno. Thank you.
  • Banno
    29.6k
    You're such a compassionate person Banno.frank

    Come on, you know me better. Not I, Wife.

    I'm not posturing, I'm pointing to a problem. And you did ask.
  • frank
    18.4k
    Come on, you know me better. Not I, Wife.

    I'm not posturing, I'm pointing to a problem. And you did ask.
    Banno

    Your wife is a compassionate person. Hint to her to watch out for scams. It's hard to avoid them these days.
  • Banno
    29.6k
    These are people she has met personally.

    And yes, we have also been involved in exposing scams.
  • frank
    18.4k
    These are people she has met personally.

    And yes, we have also been involved in exposing scams.
    Banno

    Cool.
  • Banno
    29.6k
    Cool.frank
    Yeah, not so much. Leaves me pretty cold, really. :grimace:
  • frank
    18.4k
    Yeah, not so much. Leaves me pretty cold, really. :grimace:Banno

    Maybe if you walkabout in the desert it will help. :grin:

    The American version has been around since the 1950s.frank

    Look I'm quoting myself.
  • Banno
    29.6k
    I can go in to the deficiencies of the US social security system in more detail, if that's where you want to go. That's usually seen negatively, as bashing America, and would be a bit off-topic, but happy to do so if it serves some purpose.

    All of which is not to say that our system is ideal. Far from it.
  • frank
    18.4k

    You can look up information on it if you think the Australian system could benefit from America's greater experience and wisdom. I work in an emergency room so I'm up close and personal with the needs of my community. I have a list of local charities that I've collected over the years. They're all religious, go figure. People on disability don't need my list. Undocumented people is where the real need is.
  • Banno
    29.6k
    Fine. Bear in mind that what I said here is in response to a request. In my opinion, the social security system in the US is appalling.
  • frank
    18.4k

    Ok. It was Moliere who asked. I'm sure he will be interested in your perspective.
  • Moliere
    6.4k
    Well, they suffer 20,000 more points than I, but there are those who suffer 45,000 more points than them so the real need is....


    I understand greater need and greater suffering. But lesser suffering is still worth talking about and improving. Comparing suffering as if to triage the worthy from the worthless is counter-productive to building bonds between those who suffer.
  • frank
    18.4k
    I understand greater need and greater suffering. But lesser suffering is still worth talking about and improving. Comparing suffering as if to triage the worthy from the worthless is counter-productive to building bonds between those who suffer.Moliere

    Ok. What practical bullet points emerge from this?
  • Moliere
    6.4k
    Those who live on SSI disability ought share a bond towards the undocumented, and so on, because it's in their own self-interest and basically decent.

    This idea of means-testing the suffering is pretty bad.
  • frank
    18.4k

    Definitely worth pondering, yes
  • Banno
    29.6k
    "Intersectionality", as it's called.

    Central to both the social and critical models of disability, but external to the medical model.
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