Disability in the Far East: Japan’s Social Transformation in Perceptions of People with Disabilities
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2011
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University of Hawaii at Manoa -- Center on Disability Studies
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Abstract
The phenomenon of disability is socially constructed; therefore, it is not free from norms, rules, shared understandings or value systems—in short, culture. This paper examines the universal presence of disability in the Japanese context, which is affected by a myriad of ever-changing influences, including political, cultural, and social forces.
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Japan, culture, disability
Citation
Iwakuma, M. (2011). Disability in the Far East: Japan’s Social Transformation in Perceptions of People with Disabilities. Review of Disability Studies: An International Journal, 7(3 & 4).
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