Humanity & Inclusion (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Humanity & Inclusion" in English language version.

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archive.org

  • On January 24th 2018, the global Handicap International network changed its name and became Humanity & Inclusion. This was done "to communicate more effectively on the diversity of its activities, which are not confined to supporting people with disabilities." In addition to the expanded scope of the organization's activities, the term "handicap" had been rejected by the people it was applied to because it had been imposed on them by social workers. See Nelson, Jack Adolph (1994). The Disabled, the Media, and the Information Age. Greenwood. p. 28. ISBN 9780313284724. in keeping with the disability rights movement analysis of the situation—that the individual is okay but society has put him or her at a disadvantage—the term was nonetheless rejected when disabled people began wrestling the power of the programs that controlled their lives from social workers and began to run their own programs…if for no other reason that it was a term imposed on them by agencies. For a discussion of the history of the term, see Amundson, Ron (n.d.). "About the Meaning of "Handicap"". hilo.hawaii.edu. Retrieved February 16, 2019.

clusterconvention.org

grenier.qc.ca

handicap-international.org.uk

handicap-international.us

hawaii.edu

hilo.hawaii.edu

  • On January 24th 2018, the global Handicap International network changed its name and became Humanity & Inclusion. This was done "to communicate more effectively on the diversity of its activities, which are not confined to supporting people with disabilities." In addition to the expanded scope of the organization's activities, the term "handicap" had been rejected by the people it was applied to because it had been imposed on them by social workers. See Nelson, Jack Adolph (1994). The Disabled, the Media, and the Information Age. Greenwood. p. 28. ISBN 9780313284724. in keeping with the disability rights movement analysis of the situation—that the individual is okay but society has put him or her at a disadvantage—the term was nonetheless rejected when disabled people began wrestling the power of the programs that controlled their lives from social workers and began to run their own programs…if for no other reason that it was a term imposed on them by agencies. For a discussion of the history of the term, see Amundson, Ron (n.d.). "About the Meaning of "Handicap"". hilo.hawaii.edu. Retrieved February 16, 2019.

hi-us.org

ispoint.org

ngoadvisor.net

nobelprize.org

shots.net

stopclustermunitions.org

the-monitor.org

web.archive.org