The book focuses on the engagement of Independent Living thinking and practice with critiques of welfare-state paternalism, neoliberal marketisation and familialism. It develops a comprehensive assessment of the three organising principles of social welfare - the state, the market and the family - in view of their impact on disabled people's self-determination. On this basis, the analysis highlights the successes and failures of the Independent Living movement in various welfare regimes - liberal, social-democratic, conservative, and post/socialist. The result is a pioneering cross-regime comparison grounded in Independent Living activism.
Critical theory and Independent Living draws on the work of the European Network on Independent Living (ENIL), a Europe-wide advocacy organisation led and controlled by disabled people. Case studies of ENIL's struggles for epistemic justice, campaigns for deinstitutionalisation and advocacy for personal assistance evidence the critical-theoretical contributions of Independent Living. These efforts help rethink independence as a form of interdependence - a reframing that is pivotal for critical theorising in contemporary society.
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