4.1 Article

Moving from Independence to Interdependence: A Conceptual Model for Better Understanding Community Participation of Centers for Independent Living Consumers

Journal

JOURNAL OF DISABILITY POLICY STUDIES
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 233-240

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1044207309350561

Keywords

independence; interdependence; full participation; disability; independent living

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This article provides a brief historical review of disability and personal and environmental limitations to community participation. Attention is given to policies that have limited consumer choice and to the pushback from disability rights advocates. These advocates eventually started the independent living movement as a reaction to the medical model that identifies disability as a personal defect rather than an environmental limitation. The authors discuss the basic philosophy and core services of independent living, and they present a conceptual model for helping centers for independent living (CIL) consumers more fully participate in the community. This model describes a continuum from independence to interdependence approaches to providing CIL services. Finally, the authors describe current research to determine the effectiveness of these two approaches to increasing consumer community participation.

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