The Moral Order of Supported Care offers an insightinto the everyday ways in which intellectualdisability is contextually dependent on therelationship between client and support worker.Using Sacks' (1974) Membership CategorisationAnalysis, this book exposes the practical reasoningused during a meeting between six support workersand an allied-health professional as they develop abehavioural management plan for Jane, a woman with asevere intellectual and communication impairment.The first of the three analytical chapters looks atthe formulation of client choice; the secondexamines Jane's given-voice; while the third,explores the assignment of the pronoun 'it' to Jane.The book concludes with a discussion of the findingsof the investigation as they apply toethnomethodology literature and the Social Model ofDisability (Oliver, 1996). The Moral Order ofSupported Care is readable, humane and interesting:three bonuses that are not always found in the sameplace at the same time. But above all, The MoralOrder of Supported Care gives the novice and experta like the opportunity to visit a world so oftenhidden from view.