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Journal ArticleDOI

Coping with social stigma: people with intellectual disabilities moving from institutions and family home

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TLDR
Findings are presented from a phenomenological study of individuals making the transition from their family home to live more independently and 18 individuals moving from a long-stay hospital to live in community housing on people's awareness of stigma and their modes of adaptation to stigma.
Abstract
Background Social stigma and its impact on the life opportunities and emotional well-being of people with intellectual disabilities (IDs) are a subject of both practical and theoretical importance. The disability movement and evolving theories of self, now point to individuals’ ability to develop positive identities and to challenge stigmatizing views and social norms. Method  This paper presents findings from a phenomenological study of 10 individuals making the transition from their family home to live more independently and 18 individuals moving from a long-stay hospital to live in community housing. It builds on an earlier data set obtained from people living at home with their families and examines: (1) people's awareness of stigma, and (2) their modes of adaptation to stigma. Results  The participants all believed that they faced stigmatized treatment and were aware of the stigma associated with ID. They presented a range of views about self in relation to disability and stigma. These views included regarding themselves as part of a minority group who reject prejudice, and attempts to distance themselves from stigmatizing services and from other individuals with IDs. Conclusions  The findings are discussed in relation to theories of self and the importance of considering psychosocial factors is stressed in clinical work with people who have IDs.

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Dissertation

Knowledge, inclusion attitudes, stigma and beliefs regarding intellectual disability and schizophrenia among the UK public: The role of ethnicity, religion and contact

K Scior
TL;DR: Overall the findings suggest that many of the relationships between awareness, causal beliefs, social distance, contact and socio-demographic factors are common to intellectual disability and schizophrenia, but vary in strength, while some are disorder specific.
Journal ArticleDOI

Being Tolerated and Being Discriminated Against: Links to Psychological Well‐Being through Threatened Social Identity Needs

TL;DR: This article investigated whether and how the experience of being tolerated and of being discriminated against are associated with psychological well-being in three correlational studies among three stigmatized groups in Turkey (LGBTI group members, people with disabilities, and ethnic Kurds, total N = 862).
Book ChapterDOI

Discrimination and the Health of People with Intellectual Disabilities

TL;DR: This chapter reviews the impact of the personal experience of discrimination on the health and well-being of people with intellectual disabilities and provides some suggestions and recommendations for future research in this area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solidarity and Reciprocity Between People With and Without Disabilities

TL;DR: This paper found that despite socio-psychological and sociological theories expecting otherwise, people are more creative than theory assumes, and that a smile can be experienced as a return gift, thus including people with intellectual disabilities in the web of balanced reciprocity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transition to Adulthood as a Joint Parent-Youth Project for Young Persons With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities.

TL;DR: This investigation of how young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities and their parents jointly construct, articulate, and act on goals pertinent to the young adults' transition to adulthood found that lack of external supports and limited parental knowledge about IDD hindered joint project formulation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Social stigma and self-esteem: The self-protective properties of stigma.

TL;DR: In this article, it is proposed that members of stigmatized groups may attribute negative feedback to prejudice against their group, compare their outcomes with those of the ingroup, rather than with the relatively advantaged outgroup, and selectively devalue those dimensions on which their group fares poorly and value those dimensions that their group excels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social Stigma: The Affective Consequences of Attributional Ambiguity

TL;DR: The authors investigated the hypothesis that the stigmatized can protect their self-esteem by attributing negative feedback to prejudice and reported less depressed affect than women who received negative feedback from a non-prejudiced evaluator.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social comparison, self-esteem and depression in people with intellectual disability.

TL;DR: It is concluded that social comparison is associated with self-esteem and depression in people with intellectual disability in the same way as it is for people without intellectual disability.
Journal ArticleDOI

A method of rating behaviour characteristies for use in large scale surveys of mental handicap

TL;DR: Two scales are described which have been found useful in the measurement of relevant behaviour characteristics of mentally handicapped people in large scale surveys and reflect speech, self-help, and literacy abilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concepts of Individual, Self, and Person in Description and Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the need to distinguish between "individual, self, and person" as biologistic, psychologistic and sociologistic modes of conceptualizing human beings is asserted.
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