The Resource The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation, Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames
The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation, Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames
Resource Information
The item The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation, Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames represents a specific, individual, material embodiment of a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in Missouri University of Science & Technology Library.This item is available to borrow from 1 library branch.
Resource Information
The item The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation, Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames represents a specific, individual, material embodiment of a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in Missouri University of Science & Technology Library.
This item is available to borrow from 1 library branch.
- Summary
- Tells a complex and compelling story of an ongoing movement that seeks to create an equitable and diverse society, inclusive of people with disabilities
- Language
- eng
- Edition
- Updated ed.
- Extent
- 1 online resource (xxxv, 323 pages)
- Contents
-
- Blindness and deafness: a comparison
- Sign language and oralism
- Braille and talking books
- Sheltered workshops
- The Lighthouse
- Mobility for blind people: guide dogs and white canes
- Jacobus tenBroek and the National Federation of the blind
- NYC Subway gates: a controversy in the blind community
- NFB: trailblazer for sections 504 and 501
- NFB and ACB: different approaches to blindness
- "Wheelchair bound" and the "the poster child".
- Deafness as culture
- American Sign Language
- The Gallaudet University uprising
- Black deaf advocates
- Education of deaf children
- Helen Keller, the social reformer
- Deinstitutionalization and independent living.
- Early accessibility efforts in the colleges
- Ed Roberts and the Independent Living Movement
- Proliferation of the independent living concept
- FDR, the "cured cripple"
- Independent living as an extension of rehabilitation
- Evaluation of the Independent Living Movement
- Independent living a nd the new disability activism
- Groundbreaking disability rights legislation: Section 504.
- The Cherry lawsuit for the Section 504 regulations
- Section 504 as a spur to political organizing
- ACCD, propelling Section 504
- The Section 504 demonstrations
- The transbus controversy
- Accessible transit and New York City
- League of the physically handicapped
- Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART)
- California accessible buses
- Mainstreaming public transit
- The civil rights significance of accessible transportation
- The March of Dimes
- Parent-initiated childhood disability organizations
- The poster child and the telethon
- Changing views of disability in the United States
- Seeing by touch, hearing by sign.
- Enacting the ADA
- The ADA and Section 504
- Title I: Employment
- Title III: Public accommodation
- Title II: Public services (State and local government)
- Title II: Public transportation
- Title IV: National Telephone Relay Service
- Title V: Miscellaneous
- The Supreme Court and the ADA
- The myth of "the disability lobby"
- Disabled in action.
- Backlash
- Every American's insurance policy
- Access to jobs and health care.
- Employment discrimination
- Affirmative Action
- Disability employment in corporate America
- Employment of people with developmental disabilities
- Employment of people with psychiatric disabilities
- The criminalization of people with psychiatric disabilities
- Different approaches to psychiatric disabilities
- New York Lawyers for the Public Interest
- Mangled care
- A two-tier health care system
- People with special needs in managed care
- An arbitrary patchwork
- Falling through the cracks: children with special health needs
- Long-term care in the community
- Health policy reforms
- The nexus between jobs and health care
- "Not dead yet" and physician-assisted suicide.
- Opposition to "the death train"
- Recognizing disability as a civil rights issue
- The Supreme Court
- AIDS activists
- Pain management
- Focus on cure: a pernicious message
- The Eugenics Movement and euthanasia
- The politics of physician-assisted suicide
- Netherlands "slippery slope" vs. U.S. "political strategy"
- First-year report on physician-assisted suicide in Oregon
- Legalizing disability discrimination
- Dangers of an inflexible law
- Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund
- "A better solution"
- The distinction between sever disability and terminal illness
- The need for disability rights attorneys
- ADAPT
- Justice for All
- The Americans with Disabilities Act.
- The computer as an accommodation
- Psychopharmacology
- Bioethical dilemmas
- The Internet and a miracle baby
- Medical and genetic information
- "Slash, burn, and poison"
- Transforming scientific orthodoxy: AIDS activism
- Toward a new vision: three queries
- Disabled veterans claim their rights.
- Legislation and self-advocacy
- Disability and technology.
- Rehabilitation: the man, not the wound
- Paralyzed veterans of America
- Automobiles: opening "new vistas"
- The pattern of denial
- Atomic and chemical guinea pigs
- Holding a nation accountable
- Education: integration in the least restrictive environment.
- A "quiet revolution"
- Enforcing the IDEA: early efforts
- An appropriate identity
- Universal design
- The IDEA in the courts
- The special education controversy
- Somnolent Samantha
- A microcosm of the real world
- Identity and culture.
- Three strands of the movement
- Disability pride: celebrating difference
- Changing perceptions and the media
- Assessment of the movement
- A stealth movement
- Accessible taxis
- Disability rights in the Twenty-first Century.
- Olmstead and the Community Choice Act
- "Visitability"
- Psychiatric survivors and consumers
- The new eugenics
- Physician-assisted suicide
- Media, technology, and disability culture
- Disable veterans
- Activists assess progress in securing disability rights
- Disability rights attorneys speak
- Teletypewriters and relay systems
- Perceptions of disability
- A clash of cultures
- The one-step campaign
- Wheelchair ingenuity
- Accessible classrooms and laboratories
- Isbn
- 9781439907450
- Label
- The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation
- Title
- The Disability Rights Movement
- Title remainder
- From Charity to Confrontation
- Statement of responsibility
- Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames
- Subject
-
- Civil Rights
- Disabled Persons -- legislation & jurisprudence
- Discrimination against people with disabilities
- Discrimination against people with disabilities -- United States
- Electronic books
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Freedom & Security | Civil Rights
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Freedom & Security | Human Rights
- People with disabilities -- Civil rights
- People with disabilities -- Civil rights -- United States
- SOCIAL SCIENCE -- People with Disabilities
- Social Discrimination
- United States
- United States
- Language
- eng
- Summary
- Tells a complex and compelling story of an ongoing movement that seeks to create an equitable and diverse society, inclusive of people with disabilities
- Cataloging source
- N$T
- http://library.link/vocab/creatorName
- Fleischer, Doris Zames
- Dewey number
- 323.3
- Index
- index present
- Language note
- In English
- LC call number
- HV1553
- LC item number
- .F58 2011eb
- Literary form
- non fiction
- Nature of contents
-
- dictionaries
- bibliography
- NLM call number
-
- 2014 B-300
- HV 1553
- http://library.link/vocab/relatedWorkOrContributorDate
- 1932-2005
- http://library.link/vocab/relatedWorkOrContributorName
- Zames, Frieda
- http://library.link/vocab/subjectName
-
- People with disabilities
- Discrimination against people with disabilities
- Civil Rights
- Disabled Persons
- Social Discrimination
- United States
- POLITICAL SCIENCE
- POLITICAL SCIENCE
- SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Discrimination against people with disabilities
- People with disabilities
- United States
- Label
- The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation, Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames
- Antecedent source
- unknown
- Bibliography note
- Includes bibliographical references and index
- Carrier category
- online resource
- Carrier category code
-
- cr
- Carrier MARC source
- rdacarrier
- Color
- mixed
- Content category
- text
- Content type code
-
- txt
- Content type MARC source
- rdacontent
- Contents
-
- Blindness and deafness: a comparison
- Sign language and oralism
- Braille and talking books
- Sheltered workshops
- The Lighthouse
- Mobility for blind people: guide dogs and white canes
- Jacobus tenBroek and the National Federation of the blind
- NYC Subway gates: a controversy in the blind community
- NFB: trailblazer for sections 504 and 501
- NFB and ACB: different approaches to blindness
- "Wheelchair bound" and the "the poster child".
- Deafness as culture
- American Sign Language
- The Gallaudet University uprising
- Black deaf advocates
- Education of deaf children
- Helen Keller, the social reformer
- Deinstitutionalization and independent living.
- Early accessibility efforts in the colleges
- Ed Roberts and the Independent Living Movement
- Proliferation of the independent living concept
- FDR, the "cured cripple"
- Independent living as an extension of rehabilitation
- Evaluation of the Independent Living Movement
- Independent living a nd the new disability activism
- Groundbreaking disability rights legislation: Section 504.
- The Cherry lawsuit for the Section 504 regulations
- Section 504 as a spur to political organizing
- ACCD, propelling Section 504
- The Section 504 demonstrations
- The transbus controversy
- Accessible transit and New York City
- League of the physically handicapped
- Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART)
- California accessible buses
- Mainstreaming public transit
- The civil rights significance of accessible transportation
- The March of Dimes
- Parent-initiated childhood disability organizations
- The poster child and the telethon
- Changing views of disability in the United States
- Seeing by touch, hearing by sign.
- Enacting the ADA
- The ADA and Section 504
- Title I: Employment
- Title III: Public accommodation
- Title II: Public services (State and local government)
- Title II: Public transportation
- Title IV: National Telephone Relay Service
- Title V: Miscellaneous
- The Supreme Court and the ADA
- The myth of "the disability lobby"
- Disabled in action.
- Backlash
- Every American's insurance policy
- Access to jobs and health care.
- Employment discrimination
- Affirmative Action
- Disability employment in corporate America
- Employment of people with developmental disabilities
- Employment of people with psychiatric disabilities
- The criminalization of people with psychiatric disabilities
- Different approaches to psychiatric disabilities
- New York Lawyers for the Public Interest
- Mangled care
- A two-tier health care system
- People with special needs in managed care
- An arbitrary patchwork
- Falling through the cracks: children with special health needs
- Long-term care in the community
- Health policy reforms
- The nexus between jobs and health care
- "Not dead yet" and physician-assisted suicide.
- Opposition to "the death train"
- Recognizing disability as a civil rights issue
- The Supreme Court
- AIDS activists
- Pain management
- Focus on cure: a pernicious message
- The Eugenics Movement and euthanasia
- The politics of physician-assisted suicide
- Netherlands "slippery slope" vs. U.S. "political strategy"
- First-year report on physician-assisted suicide in Oregon
- Legalizing disability discrimination
- Dangers of an inflexible law
- Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund
- "A better solution"
- The distinction between sever disability and terminal illness
- The need for disability rights attorneys
- ADAPT
- Justice for All
- The Americans with Disabilities Act.
- The computer as an accommodation
- Psychopharmacology
- Bioethical dilemmas
- The Internet and a miracle baby
- Medical and genetic information
- "Slash, burn, and poison"
- Transforming scientific orthodoxy: AIDS activism
- Toward a new vision: three queries
- Disabled veterans claim their rights.
- Legislation and self-advocacy
- Disability and technology.
- Rehabilitation: the man, not the wound
- Paralyzed veterans of America
- Automobiles: opening "new vistas"
- The pattern of denial
- Atomic and chemical guinea pigs
- Holding a nation accountable
- Education: integration in the least restrictive environment.
- A "quiet revolution"
- Enforcing the IDEA: early efforts
- An appropriate identity
- Universal design
- The IDEA in the courts
- The special education controversy
- Somnolent Samantha
- A microcosm of the real world
- Identity and culture.
- Three strands of the movement
- Disability pride: celebrating difference
- Changing perceptions and the media
- Assessment of the movement
- A stealth movement
- Accessible taxis
- Disability rights in the Twenty-first Century.
- Olmstead and the Community Choice Act
- "Visitability"
- Psychiatric survivors and consumers
- The new eugenics
- Physician-assisted suicide
- Media, technology, and disability culture
- Disable veterans
- Activists assess progress in securing disability rights
- Disability rights attorneys speak
- Teletypewriters and relay systems
- Perceptions of disability
- A clash of cultures
- The one-step campaign
- Wheelchair ingenuity
- Accessible classrooms and laboratories
- Control code
- 747013325
- Dimensions
- unknown
- Edition
- Updated ed.
- Extent
- 1 online resource (xxxv, 323 pages)
- File format
- unknown
- Form of item
- online
- Isbn
- 9781439907450
- Level of compression
- unknown
- Media category
- computer
- Media MARC source
- rdamedia
- Media type code
-
- c
- http://library.link/vocab/ext/overdrive/overdriveId
-
- 22573/ctt1400wdj
- b7ca5770-0285-413e-a163-651e68c845d5
- Quality assurance targets
- not applicable
- Reformatting quality
- unknown
- Sound
- unknown sound
- Specific material designation
- remote
- System control number
- (OCoLC)747013325
- Label
- The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation, Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames
- Antecedent source
- unknown
- Bibliography note
- Includes bibliographical references and index
- Carrier category
- online resource
- Carrier category code
-
- cr
- Carrier MARC source
- rdacarrier
- Color
- mixed
- Content category
- text
- Content type code
-
- txt
- Content type MARC source
- rdacontent
- Contents
-
- Blindness and deafness: a comparison
- Sign language and oralism
- Braille and talking books
- Sheltered workshops
- The Lighthouse
- Mobility for blind people: guide dogs and white canes
- Jacobus tenBroek and the National Federation of the blind
- NYC Subway gates: a controversy in the blind community
- NFB: trailblazer for sections 504 and 501
- NFB and ACB: different approaches to blindness
- "Wheelchair bound" and the "the poster child".
- Deafness as culture
- American Sign Language
- The Gallaudet University uprising
- Black deaf advocates
- Education of deaf children
- Helen Keller, the social reformer
- Deinstitutionalization and independent living.
- Early accessibility efforts in the colleges
- Ed Roberts and the Independent Living Movement
- Proliferation of the independent living concept
- FDR, the "cured cripple"
- Independent living as an extension of rehabilitation
- Evaluation of the Independent Living Movement
- Independent living a nd the new disability activism
- Groundbreaking disability rights legislation: Section 504.
- The Cherry lawsuit for the Section 504 regulations
- Section 504 as a spur to political organizing
- ACCD, propelling Section 504
- The Section 504 demonstrations
- The transbus controversy
- Accessible transit and New York City
- League of the physically handicapped
- Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART)
- California accessible buses
- Mainstreaming public transit
- The civil rights significance of accessible transportation
- The March of Dimes
- Parent-initiated childhood disability organizations
- The poster child and the telethon
- Changing views of disability in the United States
- Seeing by touch, hearing by sign.
- Enacting the ADA
- The ADA and Section 504
- Title I: Employment
- Title III: Public accommodation
- Title II: Public services (State and local government)
- Title II: Public transportation
- Title IV: National Telephone Relay Service
- Title V: Miscellaneous
- The Supreme Court and the ADA
- The myth of "the disability lobby"
- Disabled in action.
- Backlash
- Every American's insurance policy
- Access to jobs and health care.
- Employment discrimination
- Affirmative Action
- Disability employment in corporate America
- Employment of people with developmental disabilities
- Employment of people with psychiatric disabilities
- The criminalization of people with psychiatric disabilities
- Different approaches to psychiatric disabilities
- New York Lawyers for the Public Interest
- Mangled care
- A two-tier health care system
- People with special needs in managed care
- An arbitrary patchwork
- Falling through the cracks: children with special health needs
- Long-term care in the community
- Health policy reforms
- The nexus between jobs and health care
- "Not dead yet" and physician-assisted suicide.
- Opposition to "the death train"
- Recognizing disability as a civil rights issue
- The Supreme Court
- AIDS activists
- Pain management
- Focus on cure: a pernicious message
- The Eugenics Movement and euthanasia
- The politics of physician-assisted suicide
- Netherlands "slippery slope" vs. U.S. "political strategy"
- First-year report on physician-assisted suicide in Oregon
- Legalizing disability discrimination
- Dangers of an inflexible law
- Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund
- "A better solution"
- The distinction between sever disability and terminal illness
- The need for disability rights attorneys
- ADAPT
- Justice for All
- The Americans with Disabilities Act.
- The computer as an accommodation
- Psychopharmacology
- Bioethical dilemmas
- The Internet and a miracle baby
- Medical and genetic information
- "Slash, burn, and poison"
- Transforming scientific orthodoxy: AIDS activism
- Toward a new vision: three queries
- Disabled veterans claim their rights.
- Legislation and self-advocacy
- Disability and technology.
- Rehabilitation: the man, not the wound
- Paralyzed veterans of America
- Automobiles: opening "new vistas"
- The pattern of denial
- Atomic and chemical guinea pigs
- Holding a nation accountable
- Education: integration in the least restrictive environment.
- A "quiet revolution"
- Enforcing the IDEA: early efforts
- An appropriate identity
- Universal design
- The IDEA in the courts
- The special education controversy
- Somnolent Samantha
- A microcosm of the real world
- Identity and culture.
- Three strands of the movement
- Disability pride: celebrating difference
- Changing perceptions and the media
- Assessment of the movement
- A stealth movement
- Accessible taxis
- Disability rights in the Twenty-first Century.
- Olmstead and the Community Choice Act
- "Visitability"
- Psychiatric survivors and consumers
- The new eugenics
- Physician-assisted suicide
- Media, technology, and disability culture
- Disable veterans
- Activists assess progress in securing disability rights
- Disability rights attorneys speak
- Teletypewriters and relay systems
- Perceptions of disability
- A clash of cultures
- The one-step campaign
- Wheelchair ingenuity
- Accessible classrooms and laboratories
- Control code
- 747013325
- Dimensions
- unknown
- Edition
- Updated ed.
- Extent
- 1 online resource (xxxv, 323 pages)
- File format
- unknown
- Form of item
- online
- Isbn
- 9781439907450
- Level of compression
- unknown
- Media category
- computer
- Media MARC source
- rdamedia
- Media type code
-
- c
- http://library.link/vocab/ext/overdrive/overdriveId
-
- 22573/ctt1400wdj
- b7ca5770-0285-413e-a163-651e68c845d5
- Quality assurance targets
- not applicable
- Reformatting quality
- unknown
- Sound
- unknown sound
- Specific material designation
- remote
- System control number
- (OCoLC)747013325
Subject
- Civil Rights
- Disabled Persons -- legislation & jurisprudence
- Discrimination against people with disabilities
- Discrimination against people with disabilities -- United States
- Electronic books
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Freedom & Security | Civil Rights
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Freedom & Security | Human Rights
- People with disabilities -- Civil rights
- People with disabilities -- Civil rights -- United States
- SOCIAL SCIENCE -- People with Disabilities
- Social Discrimination
- United States
- United States
Genre
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.mst.edu/portal/The-Disability-Rights-Movement--From-Charity-to/uZywK0SbnBs/" typeof="Book http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Item"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.mst.edu/portal/The-Disability-Rights-Movement--From-Charity-to/uZywK0SbnBs/">The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation, Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.mst.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.mst.edu/">Missouri University of Science & Technology Library</a></span></span></span></span></div>
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.mst.edu/portal/The-Disability-Rights-Movement--From-Charity-to/uZywK0SbnBs/" typeof="Book http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Item"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.mst.edu/portal/The-Disability-Rights-Movement--From-Charity-to/uZywK0SbnBs/">The Disability Rights Movement : From Charity to Confrontation, Doris Zames Fleischer and Frieda Zames</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.mst.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.mst.edu/">Missouri University of Science & Technology Library</a></span></span></span></span></div>