1st Edition

Disability, Citizenship and Community Care: A Case for Welfare Rights? A Case for Welfare Rights?

By Kirstein Rummery Copyright 2002

    This title was first published in 2002: A critical look at the experiences of disabled people in accessing and receiving community care in the UK. The author uses a framework of citizenship, encompassing civil and social rights, to ask difficult questions about the role the welfare state plays in preventing and promoting people's independence. The book discusses the relationship between rationing, policy, professional practice and the needs of disabled people and their families from a citizenship perspective and provides critical insight into possible solutions to promoting disabled people's citizenship and independence within the limits of today's welfare state.

    1: The Role of Assessments in Community Care for Disabled People in England from 1993; 2: Social Policy, Rights and Citizenship; 3: Community Care for Disabled People in the 1990s; 4: Managing Demand at the Frontline: Managerial, Bureaucratic and Professional Gatekeeping; 5: Negotiating Barriers in the Dark? Accessing Assessments; 6: Being a ‘Competent Member’ of the Community; 7: Community Care Assessments in the 1990s; 8: Assessment and Care Management Policy and Practice in the New Millennium

    Biography

    Kirstein Rummery