A state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the Province of Manitoba

In Canada, and throughout western industrialized society, there has been a change in direction concerning services and attitudes towards mentally retarded persons. Manitoba has not been excluded from these social shifts. This is becoming more apparent in the 1980s as many become aware that mental re...

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Main Author: Adams, Christopher J.
Language:en_US
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3573
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-35732014-03-29T03:42:50Z A state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the Province of Manitoba Adams, Christopher J. In Canada, and throughout western industrialized society, there has been a change in direction concerning services and attitudes towards mentally retarded persons. Manitoba has not been excluded from these social shifts. This is becoming more apparent in the 1980s as many become aware that mental retardation can be seen within a social framework. The thesis will deal with North American trends in mental retardation policy and how Manitoba has been a part of these overall developments. Issues such as deinstitutionalization have arisen outside Manitoba but have influenced both the Provincial Government and the Association for Community Living. The local divisions have strong contact with their national organization hence influence, and are influenced by them. The development of attitudes toward, and treatment of mentally retarded people in Manitoba will be the focus of the examination. Because the patterns in Manitoba will be compared to those found in North America, the thesis is both descriptive and comparative. It is aimed at the political nature of the developments through a description of those interests of mentally retarded people and an examination of the means by which they have affected government policy. Manitoba, it will be argued, has shown advances along the lines which the ACLs have wanted but this should not be seen as unique as it will be shown that throughout North America there has been a push for deinstitutionalization and community living. The ACLs are effective organizations and the government of late has shown a responsiveness in Manitoba but Manitoba should not be seen as the vanguard of community living. It has been progressive in some areas and slow to change in others. For example, the Manitoba Human Rights Act regards "mental Handicap" as a condition which is to be protected from discrimination while the Manitoba Mental Health Act is considered as one of the Province's most regressive pieces of legislation. Therefore the thesis in each section... 2009-12-02T16:54:44Z 2009-12-02T16:54:44Z 1986-08-01-01:09T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3573 en_US The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description In Canada, and throughout western industrialized society, there has been a change in direction concerning services and attitudes towards mentally retarded persons. Manitoba has not been excluded from these social shifts. This is becoming more apparent in the 1980s as many become aware that mental retardation can be seen within a social framework. The thesis will deal with North American trends in mental retardation policy and how Manitoba has been a part of these overall developments. Issues such as deinstitutionalization have arisen outside Manitoba but have influenced both the Provincial Government and the Association for Community Living. The local divisions have strong contact with their national organization hence influence, and are influenced by them. The development of attitudes toward, and treatment of mentally retarded people in Manitoba will be the focus of the examination. Because the patterns in Manitoba will be compared to those found in North America, the thesis is both descriptive and comparative. It is aimed at the political nature of the developments through a description of those interests of mentally retarded people and an examination of the means by which they have affected government policy. Manitoba, it will be argued, has shown advances along the lines which the ACLs have wanted but this should not be seen as unique as it will be shown that throughout North America there has been a push for deinstitutionalization and community living. The ACLs are effective organizations and the government of late has shown a responsiveness in Manitoba but Manitoba should not be seen as the vanguard of community living. It has been progressive in some areas and slow to change in others. For example, the Manitoba Human Rights Act regards "mental Handicap" as a condition which is to be protected from discrimination while the Manitoba Mental Health Act is considered as one of the Province's most regressive pieces of legislation. Therefore the thesis in each section...
author Adams, Christopher J.
spellingShingle Adams, Christopher J.
A state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the Province of Manitoba
author_facet Adams, Christopher J.
author_sort Adams, Christopher J.
title A state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the Province of Manitoba
title_short A state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the Province of Manitoba
title_full A state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the Province of Manitoba
title_fullStr A state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the Province of Manitoba
title_full_unstemmed A state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the Province of Manitoba
title_sort state of mutualism : a political study of organizations which represent mentally retarded persons in the province of manitoba
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3573
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