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Is our legal, health care and social support infrastructure neurodiverse enough? How far are the aims of the neurodiversity movement fulfilled for those diagnosed with cognitive disability and learning disability?

Robin Mackenzie (Law School, University of Kent, UK)
John Watts (Maidstone CAMHS, UK)

Tizard Learning Disability Review

ISSN: 1359-5474

Article publication date: 31 January 2011

757

Abstract

Should those of us who are neurologically atypical be diagnosed as ill, so in need of treatment or cure, or accepted as embodying a different way of being, as called for by the neurodiversity movement? We consider what legal structures and health and social care systems would be appropriate to promote neurodiversity, and how far this infrastructure in the United Kingdom today meets these criteria for those diagnosed with cognitive disability and learning disability.

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Citation

Mackenzie, R. and Watts, J. (2011), "Is our legal, health care and social support infrastructure neurodiverse enough? How far are the aims of the neurodiversity movement fulfilled for those diagnosed with cognitive disability and learning disability?", Tizard Learning Disability Review, Vol. 16 No. 1, pp. 30-37. https://doi.org/10.5042/tldr.2011.0005

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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