Sometimes Allies: Parent-Led Disability Organizations and Social Movements

Despite the recent growth of scholarship on parent activism related to disability, the existing literature tends to focus on specific organizations and time periods and draw on a social psychological approach to examine the motivations of parents in becoming activists. This paper considers disabilit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Allison C. Carey, Pamela Block, Richard K. Scotch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University Libraries 2019-02-01
Series:Disability Studies Quarterly
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dsq-sds.org/article/view/6281
id doaj-b5d26ee33ec9435986d33ee27e03728c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b5d26ee33ec9435986d33ee27e03728c2020-11-25T02:26:30ZengThe Ohio State University LibrariesDisability Studies Quarterly1041-57182159-83712019-02-0139110.18061/dsq.v39i1.62814204Sometimes Allies: Parent-Led Disability Organizations and Social MovementsAllison C. Carey0Pamela Block1Richard K. Scotch2Shippensburg UniversityStony Brook UniversityUniversity of Texas at DallasDespite the recent growth of scholarship on parent activism related to disability, the existing literature tends to focus on specific organizations and time periods and draw on a social psychological approach to examine the motivations of parents in becoming activists. This paper considers disability activism as a field of social movement organizations and focuses on disability organizations led by parents and their relationship to organizations led by activists with disabilities. Using qualitative methods informed by theoretically focused coding and grounded situational analysis, we examine the public framing of four national parent-led organizations that are politically prominent. Through this field approach, the analysis reveals the diversity of parent-led organizations, commonalities and the fault lines among these organizations, and the factors which effect the likelihood of alliances between organizations led by parents and those led by activists with disabilities.http://dsq-sds.org/article/view/6281parent activismsocial movementsalliance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allison C. Carey
Pamela Block
Richard K. Scotch
spellingShingle Allison C. Carey
Pamela Block
Richard K. Scotch
Sometimes Allies: Parent-Led Disability Organizations and Social Movements
Disability Studies Quarterly
parent activism
social movements
alliance
author_facet Allison C. Carey
Pamela Block
Richard K. Scotch
author_sort Allison C. Carey
title Sometimes Allies: Parent-Led Disability Organizations and Social Movements
title_short Sometimes Allies: Parent-Led Disability Organizations and Social Movements
title_full Sometimes Allies: Parent-Led Disability Organizations and Social Movements
title_fullStr Sometimes Allies: Parent-Led Disability Organizations and Social Movements
title_full_unstemmed Sometimes Allies: Parent-Led Disability Organizations and Social Movements
title_sort sometimes allies: parent-led disability organizations and social movements
publisher The Ohio State University Libraries
series Disability Studies Quarterly
issn 1041-5718
2159-8371
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Despite the recent growth of scholarship on parent activism related to disability, the existing literature tends to focus on specific organizations and time periods and draw on a social psychological approach to examine the motivations of parents in becoming activists. This paper considers disability activism as a field of social movement organizations and focuses on disability organizations led by parents and their relationship to organizations led by activists with disabilities. Using qualitative methods informed by theoretically focused coding and grounded situational analysis, we examine the public framing of four national parent-led organizations that are politically prominent. Through this field approach, the analysis reveals the diversity of parent-led organizations, commonalities and the fault lines among these organizations, and the factors which effect the likelihood of alliances between organizations led by parents and those led by activists with disabilities.
topic parent activism
social movements
alliance
url http://dsq-sds.org/article/view/6281
work_keys_str_mv AT allisonccarey sometimesalliesparentleddisabilityorganizationsandsocialmovements
AT pamelablock sometimesalliesparentleddisabilityorganizationsandsocialmovements
AT richardkscotch sometimesalliesparentleddisabilityorganizationsandsocialmovements
_version_ 1724846687151718400