

An edition of Disability and the city (1996)
international perspectives
By Robert Imrie
Publish Date
1996
Publisher
P. Chapman
Language
eng
Pages
200
Description:
This book explores one of the crucial contexts within which the marginal status of disabled people is experienced: the interrelationships between disability, physical access, and the built environment. The author explores some of the critical processes underpinning the social construction of disability as a state of marginalization in the built environment. These concerns are interwoven with a discussion of the state's changing role in defining, categorising, and reproducing 'states of disablement' for people with disabilities. Using a range of empirical material from the UK and the USA, the book documents how the environmental planning system in Britain attempts to address the inaccessibility of the built environment, and discusses how disabled people contest the constraints placed on their mobility.
subjects: Barrier-free design, Access for the physically handicapped, Public buildings, Dwellings, Services for, City planning, Architecture and the physically handicapped, Physically handicapped, People with disabilities, Great Britain, Disability evaluation, Urban policy, People with disabilities, housing, People with disabilities, transportation
Places: Great Britain, United States