Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T15:16:39.521Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Understanding Disability Policy Development: Integrating Social Policy Research with the Disability Studies Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 June 2022

Roni Holler*
Affiliation:
The Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, Head of the Center for Disability Studies, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
Yael Ohayon
Affiliation:
The Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
*
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Studies on the development of social policies have provided us with a rich body of knowledge. However, being based mostly on class, gender or racial analysis, this body of work has seldom used disability as an analytical framework. This article proposes a systematic research agenda for addressing this lacuna. Drawing on the political and institutional approaches, this article illustrates how mainstream theories on social policy development cannot be assumed applicable to disability policies ‘as is’. To apply them effectively, we argue, students of social policy need to rework them in light of the insights of disability studies. Such conceptual work would involve closer attention to the uniqueness of disability as a socio-political category. Integrating these social policy theories with disability studies will allow us to better identify the unique political and institutional factors behind the trajectories of disability related policy. We conclude this discussion with suggestions for future research.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

In recent decades, insights from disability studies, mainly the recognition that disability is a socio-political category, have started to affect the way social policy as a discipline views the welfare state and its approach to disabled people. Despite this (gradual, fragmental and selective) impact of disability studies, however, it appears that these two research fields have yet to meet and fertilise one another in at least one area: understanding the factors shaping disability policy. Whereas the social policy discipline has developed a broad range of theories allowing us to understand the development of social policies, these have hitherto largely failed to take disability seriously. Consequently, we know little about the dynamics of disability policy development and struggle to explain its variation across space and time.

The aim of this article is to propose a research agenda to fill this lacuna. Specifically, by drawing on the political and institutional approaches, we seek to illustrate how two mainstream social policy theories – the political and institutional approaches – can benefit considerably from incorporating the insight of disability studies, and point out some promising avenues for future research. By doing so we seek to demonstrate how greater integration of disability studies with social policy can lead to new understandings of welfare state dynamics.

Disability studies and the socio-political understanding of disability

Spurred by the disability movement’s struggle for social change, disability studies have increasingly gained a foothold in academia. As with any other critical discipline, this burgeoning field has not confined itself to a single over-arching theoretical paradigm, but is rather composed of several schools of thought, including materialist, feminist, postmodernist, and post-colonialist disability studies (Shakespeare, Reference Shakespeare2013; Goodley, Reference Goodley2016). Underlying this rich and fruitful canopy, we can discern several root arguments that feed into all these paradigms. Most importantly, rather than an individual medical pathology, disability studies invite us to think about disability as a socio-political category embedded in concrete social and (unequal) power relations. Consequently, it focuses on the ways in which physical structures, cultural norms and public attitudes – institutionalised through exclusionary public policies – disable and marginalise individuals with disabilities (Thomas, Reference Thomas2007; Oliver and Barnes, Reference Oliver and Barnes2012; Shakespeare, Reference Shakespeare2013).

Viewing disability as a social category of analysis also means that our understanding of social inequality can benefit from drawing on disabled people’s experiences and the role disability plays in them. Doing so involves questioning and redefining the core values of Western society, including in/dependence, power, citizenship, normalcy and productivity (Goodley, Reference Goodley2016).

Further, as disability is a political rather than a strictly professional issue, primary emphasis should be given to the choices and voices of disabled people in both private and collective decisions. Relatedly, looking back in time, now equipped with a disability studies lens, also enables us to relocate the pivotal though neglected role of disabled people in making their own history (Barnes and Mercer, Reference Barnes and Mercer2005; Borsay, Reference Borsay2005).

As one of the main social institutions in modern society, the welfare state has long been the focus of a significant amount of disability studies research. The most important contribution of disability studies to the understanding of the welfare state has to do with how they have unfolded its complex and sometimes-contradictory role in shaping the life conditions of disabled people and in (re)constructing the disability category. In particular, similar to analyses of race and gender, disability studies have challenged oversimplified Whig interpretations of the welfare state by pointing to the (sometimes covert) mechanisms by which it has been not only progressive and beneficial, but also regulatory, exclusionary, and oppressive (Priestley, Reference Priestley2000; Barnes and Mercer, Reference Barnes and Mercer2005; Borsay, Reference Borsay2005).

Adopting a disability studies perspective in social policy research

Often known as (a) social model(s) of disability, Footnote 1 these core arguments are increasingly adopted by social policy researchers. One key area in which such ‘conceptual alliance’ (Williams, Reference Williams, Irwing, Fenger and Hudson2015) is witnessed is social policy analysis, meaning the systematic effort to evaluate, conceptualise and understand the content of current and past social policies and their impact on individuals, families and communities. Although the mainstream of the discipline has often been selective in adopting these arguments, tending to resist their deeper implications in their analysis, various social policy researchers have taken disability seriously and accommodated it within their analysis (Williams, Reference Williams2016). In addition, in recent years, we have witnessed the inclusion of the model in major reference books on the welfare state (e.g. Priestley, Reference Priestley, Castles, Leibfried, Lewis, Obinger and Pierson2010).

All of these now enable us to underscore the large-scale use of segregation practices, such as residential services or ‘special’ education (Gabel, Reference Gabel2005); professionals’ excessive control over disabled peoples’ life (e.g. Kröger, Reference Kröger2009); and the normalised, individualised and ableist aspects of many social services (e.g. Edwards and Imrie, Reference Edwards and Imrie2008; Yu, Reference Yu2014). The underlying premise in all these practices and many others has been that disability is a personal tragedy resulting largely from people’s limitations or inability to overcome them. These critical efforts have also pointed to the serious repercussions of these policies for disabled people, including exclusion from community life and their construction as dependant, unproductive, and inferior citizens.

A second, more recent and less known contribution of disability studies to social policy scholarship lies in outlining cross-country differences. In particular, recent social policy studies, inspired to some degree by disability studies insights, have taken a comparative turn (Halvorsen et al., Reference Halvorsen, Hvinden, Brown, Biggeri, Tøssebro and Waldschmidt2017). This emerging literature is in its infancy, still lacking more theoretical work on how to problematise mainstream comparative concepts such as decommodification (Holler, Reference Holler2014). It has nevertheless already enabled social policy scholarship to gradually paint a richer picture of policy differences across countries and over time (e.g. Hvinden, Reference Hvinden2003; Böheim and Leoni, Reference Böheim and Leoni2018). As with gendered analysis (e.g. Bambra, Reference Bambra2007), this fresh perspective, when more fully developed, has the potential of challenging the mainstream classification of welfare regimes (e.g. Esping-Andersen, Reference Esping-Andersen1990), as well as of offering new dimensions to comparative welfare state research (Kuznetsova et al., Reference Kuznetsova, Yalcin and Priestley2017).

The third contribution, which is the focus of the present study, is understanding the development of disability policies. Whereas some progress has been made in analysing disability policy and in outlining cross-country differences, this is a key area where disability studies and social policies have yet to meet. The social policy discipline has generated lively scholarly discussions, providing us with some key theoretical explanations for social policy development (Starke, Reference Starke2006; van Kersbergen and Vis, Reference van Kersbergen and Vis2014). Despite the theoretical richness of these theories, mainstream social policy scholars have only rarely applied the insights of disability studies to inform these theories and to explore the causal mechanisms behind disability policy development and cross-country differences.

This relative failure to take disability seriously does not mean that the social policy literature has completely ignored the development of disability policies. Indeed, some of the studies that have formed the empirical basis for mainstream social policy theories have referred to disability policies exclusively or as part of a broader analysis (e.g. Kuipers, Reference Kuipers2010). Most of these studies, however, have limited themselves to disability benefits, ignoring other key areas of disability policy, including services and anti-discrimination measures. More importantly, these studies have also tended to view disability policies as case studies based on which their conclusions could be generalised to other policy areas. In a similar vein, they have also tended to overlook the uniqueness of disability policies and the insights of disability studies. By doing so they have assumed, but rarely systematically validated, that disability policy does not markedly differ with regard to their policy making processes.

The last point is crucially important as the development of disability policies is often not straightforward, making the disability policy field a puzzling case. For example, despite the overall ‘permanent austerity’ climate (Pierson, Reference Pierson1998), in some disability policy domains such as anti-discrimination measures, the welfare state has not only been resilient to retrenchment measures, but in fact has expanded its involvement (Burke and Barnes, Reference Burke and Barnes2018). Moreover, during this retrenchment period in some welfare states such as Australia (Miller and Hayward, Reference Miller and Hayward2017) and the US (Morris, Reference Morris2016), expansion of rights has been witnessed even in traditional social security programmes. Another puzzling example can be found in recent comparative studies that have convincingly shown how, in contrast to the ‘end-of-ideology’ sentiment (Barton, Reference Barton2001), disability policy convergence is not necessarily the norm. These analyses suggest that differences between countries have not diminished but rather increased in many aspects, especially those related to redistributive measures, resulting also in substantial variations in key outcome measures (e.g. Kuznetsova et al., Reference Kuznetsova, Yalcin and Priestley2017; Tschanz and Staub, Reference Tschanz and Staub2017; Böheim and Leoni, Reference Böheim and Leoni2018). Relatedly, although substantial changes have taken place in some countries, the status quo has been maintained in others (e.g. Kuipers, Reference Kuipers2010; Morris, Reference Morris2016).

The lack of mutual fertilisation of the two fields – social policy and disability studies – means that we still know precious little about the determinants of disability policy development. This lacuna means that several important theoretical and empirical questions remain relatively underexplored: how can we explain both geographical and historical differences in disability policies? Why did radical changes occur in some welfare states but not in others? Why have we recently witnessed a progressive increase in state intervention in some policy domains such as anti-discrimination laws, but regression in others, specifically disability benefits? And how are the policy-making processes in these realms different from those of other policy domains, if at all?

The purpose of this article is to propose a systematic research agenda that places these questions at its forefront and integrates welfare state scholarship with disability studies in addressing them. This conceptual work involves paying closer attention to the uniqueness of disability as a socio-political category. By pointing to the uniqueness of disability policy, we follow other scholars (e.g. Ebbinghaus and Naumann, Reference Ebbinghaus, Naumann, Ebbinghaus and Naumann2018) in problematising the holistic view of the welfare state. While welfare states have certainly followed general trends, usually encapsulated under the concept of welfare state regimes, there are nonetheless significant differences across social policy domains, as each is characterised and driven by diverse interests, institutional landscapes, ideas, and conflicts.

In what follows, we first review two of the influential theoretical approaches in social policy studies: the political and institutional. After their short introduction, we translate them into the realm of disability and demonstrate how they can benefit from the insights of disability studies. In particular, we argue that the latter can help fine-tune these theories, and relatedly that disability policies may have unique features that require us to rethink these social policy theories and their application to the disability context.

The political approach

The role of parties and union politics

Social policy is primarily about politics. The political approach draws on this conflictual nature of the policy-making process, arguing that welfare provision reflects not only structural, objective needs, but mainly the interests, conflicts and power relations prevailing in specific social contexts. This ‘politics matters’ strand (van Kersbergen, Reference van Kersbergen2006) is composed of various schools of thought, prominent among which is the power resources theory (Esping-Andersen, Reference Esping-Andersen1985; Korpi and Palme, Reference Korpi and Palme2003; Korpi, Reference Korpi2006). Drawing on social-democratic sentiments, power resources scholars argue that in democratic societies, characterised by universal suffrage and competitive elections, social policy is not (only) a straightforward reflection of general structural needs and changes, but rather primarily a result of political struggle between labour and capital. According to this line of thought, welfare state programmes are largely rooted in class conflict, so that when working class parties or trade unions are powerful, they are able to counterbalance capital, resulting in welfare state expansion.

Over time, internal critiques have led to several adjustments in power resources theory. The first being that working class mobilisation is not sufficient, in itself, to counterbalance the economic power of capital, and hence the ability to build class alliances should also be taken into consideration (e.g. van Kersbergen, Reference van Kersbergen2003). Moreover, in many cases, the main political force behind welfare state expansion is not necessarily social-democratic parties or unions, but rather their Christian-democratic counterparts, and centre-right conservatives more generally. According to this line of thought, parties, unions and labour power are indeed critical in pushing the welfare state forward, but it challenges the assumption that ‘the power of labour equals the power of social democracy’ (Kalyvas and van Kersbergen, Reference Kalyvas and van Kersbergen2010: 197).

A large body of studies has provided us with credible empirical evidence to suggest that partisanship does matter and that left mobilising power, through working class parties and trade unions, is at least to some extent positively associated with welfare state efforts (Korpi and Palme, Reference Korpi and Palme2003; Allan and Scruggs, Reference Allan and Scruggs2004). This association has been especially evident during the golden age of welfare state expansion, but it still holds true in our ‘era of austerity’ and under the ‘new politics’ regime (Finseraas and Vernby, Reference Finseraas and Vernby2011).

However, to what extent is power resources theory indeed applicable to the realm of disability policy? Put differently, should we take for granted that playing a progressive role in shaping the structure of the welfare state has also led working class parties and trade unions to play a progressive role in shaping disability policy? In addressing these questions, we argue, one needs to pay attention to the marginal position of disabled people in domestic politics, and consequently to the possibility that politics might have played a different, even regressive role, in shaping disability policy.

Let us first look at unions. As a formal political channel, unions present disabled people with several key challenges. To begin with, they tend to advocate mainly for the needs and preferences of the average workers, leaving many others, including disabled workers, ‘out in the wilderness’ (Humphrey, Reference Humphrey2000: 265). This is especially true in majoritarian systems, in which minority interests tend to be overlooked. This problem is exacerbated if we take into consideration that accessibility issues (in their broad sense) often restrict disabled people’s participation in union activities (Humphrey, Reference Humphrey2017; Lurie, Reference Lurie2017). Additionally, in representing worker interests, unions tend to overlook and sometimes even go against the interests of those excluded from the labour market, including disabled people. An illustrative example is self-directed social care, in which ‘some of the battle lines’ (Glasby, Reference Glasby2014: 254) have been drawn between care recipients and public service trade unions.

Significant difficulties can also be found in the partisan arena. Disability scholars have long pointed at the potential difficulties faced by disabled people in exercising their political rights as voters. These include being denied access to necessary information or ‘locked’ in segregated residential services, social isolation, low levels of education or negative and stereotyped attitudes. The result is that disabled citizens are less likely than non-disabled ones to vote and participate in other formal political activities (e.g. Schur et al., Reference Schur, Ameri and Adya2017; Teglbjærg et al., Reference Teglbjærg, Mamali, Chapman and Dammeyer2021). Moreover, the medical subcategorisation of disabled people, as reflected in health and welfare systems, makes it difficult for them to think of themselves as a unified group. This divide-and-conquer attitude ‘has obvious implications for any notions of class based political activity’ (Oliver and Zarb, Reference Oliver and Zarb1989: 222).

These obstacles to formal political participation are also evident when we examine disabled people as elected representatives. Compared to their non-disabled counterparts, they have fewer opportunities to engage with and be represented in formal politics, especially in the partisan arena. Importantly, as elaborated below, this low level of formal participation is highly related to the ableism of the institutional-legal landscape (Chaney, Reference Chaney2015). A good example would be that unlike other minorities, disabled people are usually not conceived as a social group entitled to equal representation, although this seems to vary across countries (Priestley et al., Reference Priestley, Stickings, Loja, Grammenos, Lawson, Waddington and Fridriksdottir2016). This ableist setting not only makes it difficult for candidates to become elected, but can also lead politicians with disabilities to ‘pass’ as non-disabled whatever possible and avoid focusing their public activities in that area.

Taken together, all these barriers should at least put a question mark on our assumption that traditional, formal politics, including unions and worker parties, often play a pivotal, progressive role in shaping disability policy. Due to the paucity of studies, such assumption has rarely been studied empirically, let alone on a comparative basis. This means we know very little not only about differences between countries in exercising political rights, but also about the effect of this scarce resource on disability policies. Accordingly, a key future research agenda is to delve deeper into these issues. Among other things, this agenda would benefit from exploring the organisational, institutional, and political conditions, if any, under which disabled people manage to articulate their interests through unions and working-class parties.

Another, related direction for future research stems from the disability studies insight that ‘disability friendly’ policy should be not only about redistribution but also about recognition (Goodlad and Riddell, Reference Goodlad and Riddell2005). Good examples are issues of choice, autonomy, and stigma. Hitherto, power resources theory has tended to ignore them, and consequently struggled to address some important questions. For example, do trade unions and working class parties also shape issues related to choice and stigma, or are these issues affected mainly by other political actors such as the disability movement? Put differently, although class-based organisations such as unions are critical in shaping disability redistributive measures, could it be that issues of control, autonomy and choice are shaped by other political forces, including service users? Such underexplored questions remind us that we cannot assume that welfare state efforts are monolithic. Rather, it is more sensible to assume that they have multiple aspects shaped by different political factors and casual mechanisms (Bolzendahl, Reference Bolzendahl2011).

Social policy making from below

The insight that disabled people face multiple structural barriers in participating in traditional, formal representative structures has led disability studies scholars to suggest alternative channels of political activism, prominent among which is social movements (Oliver and Barnes, Reference Oliver and Barnes2012). They argue that through a diverse set of non-conventional, confrontational, political tactics practiced by a loose ‘network of grassroots organisations controlled and run by disabled people’ (Campbell and Oliver, Reference Campbell and Oliver2013: ix), disabled people can best resist discrimination, promote progressive policies and achieve a non-disabling society. Moreover, unlike traditional class-based politics, the disability movement is perceived ‘as an exemplar of Fraser’s triple movement, criticising domination through social protection and marketisation’ (Dodd, Reference Dodd2016: 162), thus aiming to achieve both redistributive and recognition goals.

Despite the normative contribution of this argument, however, and despite the potential impact of the disability movement in the social and cultural realms, research has been slow to systematically theorise and evaluate the movement’s political impact. In fact, until recently most of the available literature has relied on anecdotal evidence, with little empirical data to back this argument, and with little borrowing of theoretical arguments from the growing literature on social movements’ impact. This empirical and theoretical basis is especially shaky with regard to the cross-national perspective (Waldschmidt, et al., Reference Waldschmidt, Karačić, Sturm and Dins2015).

Consequently, several questions remain to be answered in future research. For example, what conditions contribute to disabled people’s ability to mobilise? Is that ability related to the enactment of progressive disability policies? What institutional and political conditions moderate this relationship? Are disruptive tactics (e.g. sit-ins) more useful than moderate activities (e.g. lobbying)? And is the movement’s power relevant not only to choice, autonomy and stigma issues, but also to redistribution? Again, it is only in recent years that these questions have (slowly) begun to be systematically and empirically addressed (e.g. Waldschmidt et al., Reference Waldschmidt, Karačić, Sturm and Dins2015). Moving forward in this avenue will enable us to better understand the dynamics of the disability movement and the conditions under which it is in position to make a difference (Pinto, Reference Pinto2018).

Importantly, addressing these questions will also allow us to rethink the role of social movements in shaping social policies. In fact, the lack of studies on the impact of the disability movement on the welfare state and disability policy is also due to the limited use of the social movement conceptualisation within the social policy discipline (Nadasen, Reference Nadasen2014). This paucity is not coincidental. Over the past few decades, we have witnessed the deepening of the rigid and simplistic division between ‘old’ and ‘new’ social movements and consequently the absence of the latter from the social policy discipline. As Annetts et al. (Reference Annetts, Law, McNeish and Mooney2009: 7) rightly argue, this separation fails ‘to do justice to the struggle over welfare of the past couple of centuries, let alone the past few years’; these struggles, they argue, have been always about recognition as well as about the ‘politics of the belly’. In this regard, the disability movement can serve as an illustrative case for understanding the nature of these social welfare movements and their role in shaping both the redistributive and recognition dimensions of the welfare state.

In highlighting the disability movement’s power to shape social policy, we should also not overlook the fact that whilst social movements differ from parties and unions in their structures and processes, both forms of politics are dynamic and interconnected. Particularly interesting for our purposes is the emphasis in recent social movement scholarship (e.g. Kriesi, Reference Kriesi, Porta and Diani2015; Piccio, Reference Piccio, Bosi, Giugni and Uba2016) on the fact that social movements often establish various forms of interaction with parties, seen as playing a critical role in those movements’ political outcomes. We should therefore pay attention to how far the disability movement has managed to incorporate the social model of disability into the ideologies and practices of institutionalised political channels such as parties and unions; to the political, electoral and organisational conditions under which such impact is more likely to succeed; as well as to the degree to which such interaction is effective in pursuing the movement’s long-term goals in the form of ‘disability friendly’ policies. Footnote 2

Finally, by acknowledging the fluid, sporadic, local, and informal nature of both power and resistance, disability studies have joined other critical perspectives (Luna, Reference Luna2009) in broadening our conventional understanding of politics. Under this reconceptualisation, usually overlooked by the mainstream welfare state literature (Lister, Reference Lister2004), individual practices taking place in the private sphere – including welfare fraud, withdrawal from the labour market, online shaming, sabotage and other violent acts towards service providers – carry political meaning, usually in the form of resistance (Goodley et al., Reference Goodley, Lawthom and Runswick-Cole2014; Holler, Reference Holler2020), or what Williams (Reference Williams, Irwing, Fenger and Hudson2015) calls ‘aggregate resistance’.

This rereading of the political enables us to view everyday practices as a form of resistance and subsequently locate agency in disabled people’s lives. Despite its importance, however, theoretical obscurity and lack of empirical research mean that the extent it allows us to better understand the development of disability policy and its cross-country variations is still unclear. Among other things, it is not quite clear how these ad-hoc forms of ‘everyday resistance’ (Scott, Reference Scott2008) are effective in shaping disability policies and in adding up into aggregate consequences. What are the political, institutional, and ideational constellations that enable these local, sporadic actions to translate into meaningful policy change? And to what extent are they useful in explaining cross-country differences? Here, too, systematic and comparative analysis will add an important dimension to welfare state politics.

Institutionalism

Drawing on the institutional turn in political science, throughout the last decades a growing body of welfare state research has highlighted the state’s active role in shaping social policies and in variations among welfare states and regimes (e.g. Hacker, Reference Hacker2004; Béland and Myles, Reference Béland and Myles2012). The underlying assumption is that historically constructed institutions create major constraints and opportunities that affect the actors involved in the policy-making process (Béland, Reference Béland2005). The concrete causal mechanism attributed to institutions is based, inter alia, on the specific meaning given to them. In order to illustrate our argument, we will focus on three such meanings: the political, the policy and the bureaucratic.

The political meaning: the role of ‘institutional ableism’

In their political sense, institutions refer to the rules of the game of the policy making process (Starke, Reference Starke2006) – from the type of electoral system to the degree of vertical and horizontal fragmentation of power. These rules structure the way interests, power, and preferences can be realised in the form of social policies (Obinger et al., Reference Obinger, Leibfried and Castles2005). Hitherto, only few social policy studies have used this institutional vantage point to identify the (unique) ways in which the rules of the game shape disability policy (e.g. Lewin et al., Reference Lewin, Lewin, Bäck and Westin2008). And despite the importance of these scarce studies, they too have mostly tended not to use disability as an analytical framework, thus leaving untouched the disabling impact of these rules.

Here, too, disability studies offer us a fruitful avenue for such an inquiry. Drawing on feminist ideas, disability studies have long challenged the supposedly objective separation between the public and private sphere. In a similar vein, this critical approach allows us to reconceptualise the rules of the political game. More concretely, similarly to feminist institutionalism (Mackay et al., Reference Mackay, Kenny and Chappell2010), it enables us to rethink what is included in those rules and thereby reveal significant institutional characteristics that have been ignored by the more traditional approach to the welfare state.

In particular, this reconceptualisation allows us to detect institutional ableism, the ‘systemic, pervasive, and habitual policies and practices that disadvantage’ disabled people in the policy process (Chaney, Reference Chaney2015: 169). It allows us to examine the extent to which (1) the political process enables service users to participate in policy making (Thill, Reference Thill2015); (2) formal and informal structures (e.g. representation on a national disability council) enable disabled people to be involved in policy making (Bonfils, Reference Bonfils2011; Priestley et al., Reference Priestley, Stickings, Loja, Grammenos, Lawson, Waddington and Fridriksdottir2016); (3) rules such as electoral quotas foster political representation of disabled people; and (4) the political environment is accessible (for example, by allowing non-conventional modes of communication; Evans and Reher, Reference Evans and Reher2020). Finally and above all, how does this ‘institutional ableism’ affect disability policy within and across countries?

The policy meaning: the role of policy feedback

In their policy sense, institutions are established welfare arrangements. Once enacted, these arrangements provide social groups with resources and incentives and help them shape their identities, interests, resources, and ideologies. This policy feedback process impacts future policies in various overt and subtle ways (Béland, Reference Béland2010). One theoretical example for a policy feedback mechanism is the concept of path dependency, which refers to self-reinforcing processes in a political system (Pierson, Reference Pierson2004). Highlighting the role of policy feedback does not mean, however, that stability is inevitable or even the norm. In fact, institutional change (including retrenchment measures) is always present, not necessarily in its radical sense, but rather in its gradual, low-profile sense.

Without necessarily using that term, various studies have shown that the policy feedback theoretical mechanism has great potential in understanding disability policies. This conceptualisation also allows us to rethink some of the basic assumptions of disability studies and their criticism towards traditional welfare programmes. In particular, this mechanism helps unfold the way these programmes have historically shaped the interests of disabled people, their shared identity, and their ability to organise collectively. In Northern Ireland, for example, Acheson and Williamson (Reference Acheson and Williamson2001) show that by providing opportunities for social contact, existing welfare structures, although conceived by the disability movement as paternalistic, have been highly influential for collective action, in fact providing ‘one of the few potential routes to activism’ (100). Focusing on the British case, Millward (Reference Millward2014) convincingly explains how the emergence of the disability benefit scheme in the 1970s triggered a future path-dependency process, for example by restructuring attitudes towards disability.

This raises the question of the extent to which recent dramatic and progressive changes in disability policies have shaped the political actions of disabled people and their success. One example is de-institutionalisation. Along with their well-known devastating repercussions on disabled people’s lives, institutions have paradoxically provided them with a good starting point for (enforced) collective mobilisation. This leaves us asking how has their gradual closure affected the current and future nature of this mobilisation? Similarly, how much do individual budget programmes designed to empower service consumers individualise the political process? Do they truly empower disabled people collectively, or only as individual consumers (Thill, Reference Thill2015)? Importantly, as Roulstone and Morgan (Reference Roulstone and Morgan2009) show, the answers to these questions are not straightforward, but rather contingent upon the concrete ways these reforms are implemented. Based on the British personalisation reforms of social care services, they argue that ‘Ironically, in moving away from the enforced collectivities of day services and in the absence of a CIL [Centre for Inclusive Living] or user-led organisation in every locality, there is a risk of individual support solutions fostering enforced individualism and isolation’ (343).

A similar example is the growing emphasis on legal rights and ‘litigious policies’, which ‘promote the use of litigation in resolving disputes and implementing public policies’ (Burke, Reference Burke2002: 4). How significantly did the judicialisation of disability policy reshape the power and interests of stakeholders such as disabled people’s organisations? To what extent have the growing litigation and pursuit of legal rights reshaped their political tactics? Finally, to what extent have they individualised the political process and generated a more fragmented politics? Future studies will benefit from exploring this covert relationship between recent disability rights reforms and political processes.

Finally, the key role of policy feedback also urges us to consider how change often takes the form of layering. As Burke and Barnes (Reference Burke and Barnes2018) have rightly emphasised, this requires policy scholars to ‘become a kind of geologist, digging through layers of policies that originate in different periods in political history and reflect different operating logics, support coalitions, partisan foundations and understandings of policy issues’ (102). Most importantly for us is the unique, tense nature of disability policy layering, leading contradictory disability policies to operate side-by-side, reflecting different partisan bases and notions of disability (Baudot, Reference Baudot2018; Burke and Barnes, Reference Burke and Barnes2018). Consequently, we share Burke and Barnes’s call for disability policy scholars to ‘dig down to all the layers – and find the policy that emerges from the interstices and points of conflict between them’ (113).

The bureaucratic meaning: the role of bureaucrats

In the bureaucratic sense, civil servants are considered autonomous, self-interested, active, and powerful policy actors, making them essential for social policy making. The decisive role assigned to them is based on these characteristics as well as on their unique position vis-à-vis politicians and other stakeholders. For example, civil servants usually outperform the latter in their professional expertise concerning the policy at hand. Another advantage of civil servants is their perceived legitimacy as a-political agents, engendering higher public trust (Marier, Reference Marier2005).

In what ways are bureaucrats relevant for our understanding of disability policy, and more importantly, what can disability studies contribute to this perspective? First, as many studies have shown, the influence of bureaucrats is particularly strong in policy domains considered professional. This is highly relevant to disability, which has historically been considered a highly professional and technical issue, resulting in bureaucrats having a key role in policy-making. For example, a recent study by one of the authors (Ohayon, Reference Ohayon2017) shows that the structuring of the disability allowances in Israel is highly complex, providing bureaucrats with a significant advantage over other stakeholders, including both policy-makers and clients.

More importantly, however, and as disability studies scholars have convincingly suggested, the ‘professionalism’ of a given policy domain, disability being a prime example, is not objectively given but rather embodied in a concrete political and ideological context (Swain and French, Reference Swain, French, Gary, Katherine and Michael2001; Thomas, Reference Thomas2007; Dorfman and Yabo, Reference Dorfman and Yabo2019). This core insight also suggests that the role of bureaucrats in shaping disability policy might be influenced not only by the ‘professionalism’ of the field, but also by the way and the extent to which it is constructed as professional and a-political. This reminds us that conceiving of bureaucrats as rule-makers rather than rule-followers is in itself contingent on specific institutional, political and ideological contexts, leading to both within- and cross-state differences (Asiskovitch, Reference Asiskovitch2010).

Despite their importance, these insights still await more rigid empirical investigation by social policy scholars. For example, we still know relatively little about the differences between countries with regard to both the framing of disability – as political or professional – and the extent to which these differences affect bureaucrats’ role in policy-making. We also lack knowledge on how the recent disability rights reforms have shaped the role of professionals. For example, have these reforms – which require us to view disability as a right rather than a medical-therapeutic issue – led to a meaningful decline in the power of professionals, or have they just shifted this power from one professional site (medical-therapeutic) to another (legal)?

Lastly, and closely related, when we talk about bureaucrats, we should not lose sight of the fact that policy implementation is often integral to the policy-making process. This is especially so in cases where the implementation stage is open to broad interpretations, leaving professionals with high discretionary power. Although this discretionary power is relevant to a wide range of social policies, this is particularly so in disability policy, as historically, the medical professions have played a hegemonic role in gatekeeping the allocation of social rights to disabled people. As Stone’s (Reference Stone1986) seminal work reminds us, the centrality of the medical profession has largely emanated from the ambiguity and elasticity of the disability category, leaving these and other professionals with high discretionary power in (re)shaping its boundaries. Adding to this power is the fact that disability is not a monolithic, static category, but one composed of highly diverse, dynamic and unpredictable conditions and needs.

As both a relatively elastic category and a professional issue, disability policy is highly prone to the influence of professionals (Lipsky, Reference Lipsky2010). A case in point is the continued use of highly medicalised disability assessment systems in many countries. Such use empowers trusted professionals, usually medical doctors, not only to decide about individual cases but also to shape the collective access of disabled people to social rights. They regulate the expansion or restriction of these rights, making them (un)equally available to various group of disabled people. Importantly, the scope and nature of these powers are not given, but vary widely across countries and programmes, contingent upon various institutional, ideological and organisational contexts (Gjersøe, Reference Gjersøe2016; Geiger et al., Reference Geiger, Garthwaite, Warren and Bambra2018; Waddington, Reference Waddington2018). All of these mean that in order to make sense of professionals’ role, social policy scholars need to pay closer attention to the various contexts in which their assessments are made.

Closer attention should also be paid to the dynamic of these contexts. One key example relates to the extent to which the disability rights agenda and recent social care reforms have impacted the discretionary power of the medical and welfare professions. In recent years, various scholars, usually focusing on the American and British experiences, have suggested that this professional power has not been curtailed (e.g. Ellis, Reference Ellis2007), although its nature has sometimes been redefined (Rummery and Glendinning, Reference Rummery and Glendinning2000), or relegated to other trusted professions, most and foremost the legal one (O’Brien, Reference O’Brien2001). Here too, however, systematic and comparative analysis is mostly lacking, leaving us with little knowledge regarding the universality of this professionalism and the conditions under which various legal and welfare arrangement have been able to tackle its hegemonic power.

Concluding remarks

Our aim has been to propose a research agenda focused on understanding the processes that shape disability policies across countries and over time. This research agenda seeks to connect two theoretical points of departure that have hitherto hardly met with regard to understanding the development of disability policies: theories on social policy development and disability studies. Drawing on the political and institutional theoretical approaches, our key claim is that we cannot assume these theoretical perspectives to be applicable to the disability area ‘as is’. Rather, to use them effectively, future social policy studies need to take disability seriously and rework these theories in light of the critical insights of disability studies. Such conceptual work means, for example, highlighting disabled people’s often marginalised position in formal politics; the potential role of alternative channels of political activism; the often ableist nature of the rules of the political game; the impact of existing policies on the collective identity and interests of disabled people; and the highly influential role of professionals.

Finally, note that as the present article is illustrative, a wide range of welfare approaches and mechanisms remains beyond its scope. These include, for example, the ideational approach and the role of ideational mechanisms in shaping social policies (Béland and Cox, Reference Béland and Cox2011); the relation between war and the welfare state (Obinger et al., Reference Obinger, Petersen and Starke2018); and the role of international organisations and employers in shaping social policies (Hacker and Pierson, Reference Hacker and Pierson2002). Further, being exploratory in nature, the current article poses more questions than answers. This leaves future studies with mission to crystallise a more concrete and systematic framework of how disability policy develop across time and space. Lastly, our proposal to bring together social policy theories and disability studies is not free of methodological challenges that are beyond the present scope. While many of these affect studies in other policy areas, they are heightened when addressing disability. A major example has to do with measuring the dependent variable of disability policies. The fact that they include multiple programmes and policy tools only complicates this challenge.

Footnotes

1 As several commentators (e.g. Goodley, Reference Goodley2016) have rightly pointed out, disability studies are composed of diverse kinds of social perspectives. Hence, although we use the term ‘social model’, which in the UK context refers to a particular kind of social theory, it should be understood here as an umbrella term for a range of ‘protective belt’ theories (Tregaskis, Reference Tregaskis2002), all of which share a view of disability as a socio-political rather than medical or biological category.

2 In the UK context, for example, such analysis will underscore the dynamic impact of emerging disability organisations affiliated with parties (e.g. Disability Labour, the Conservative Disability Group) and unions, as well as the way these pave the way to further policy changes.

References

Acheson, N. and Williamson, A. (2001) ‘The ambiguous role of welfare structures in relation to the emergence of activism among disabled people: Research evidence from Northern Ireland’, Disability and Society, 16, 1, 87102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allan, J. P. and Scruggs, L. (2004) ‘Political partisanship and welfare state reform in advanced industrial societies’, American Journal of Political Science, 48, 3, 496512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Annetts, J., Law, A., McNeish, W. and Mooney, G. (2009) Understanding Social Welfare Movements, Bristol: Policy Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asiskovitch, S. (2010) ‘Bureaucratic actors in mature welfare states: the case of Israel’, Policy and Politics, 38, 4, 547–63.Google Scholar
Bambra, C. (2007) ‘Defamilisation and welfare state regimes: a cluster analysis’, International Journal of Social Welfare, 16, 4, 326–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnes, C. and Mercer, G. (2005) ‘Disability, work, and welfare: challenging the social exclusion of disabled people’, Work, Employment and Society, 19, 3, 527–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barton, L. (ed.) (2001) Disability, Politics, and the Struggle for Change, London: David Fulton Publishers.Google Scholar
Baudot, P. Y. (2018) ‘Layering rights: the case of disability policies in France (2006-2016)’, Social Policy and Society, 17, 1, 117–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, D. (2005) ‘Ideas and social policy: an institutionalist perspective’, Social Policy and Administration, 39, 1, 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, D. (2010) ‘Reconsidering policy feedback: how policies affect politics’, Administration and Society, 42, 5, 568–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, D. and Cox, R. H. (eds.) (2011) Ideas and Politics in Social Research, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Béland, D. and Myles, J. (2012) ‘Varieties of federalism, institutional legacies, and social policy: comparing old-age and unemployment insurance reform in Canada’, International Journal of Social Welfare, 21, S7587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Böheim, R. and Leoni, T. (2018) ‘Sickness and disability policies: reform paths in OECD countries between 1990 and 2014’, International Journal of Social Welfare, 27, 2, 168–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bolzendahl, C. (2011) ‘Beyond the big picture: gender influences on disaggregated and domain-specific measures of social spending, 1980–1999’, Politics and Gender, 7, 1, 3570.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonfils, I. S. (2011) ‘Disability meta-organizations and policy-making under new forms of governance’, Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research, 13, 1, 3751.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borsay, A. (2005) Disability and Social Policy in Britain Since 1750: A History of Exclusion, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burke, T. (2002) Lawyers, Lawsuits, and Legal Rights: The Battle over Litigation in American Society, Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Burke, T. F. and Barnes, J. (2018) ‘Layering, kludgeocracy and disability rights: the limited influence of the social model in American disability policy’, Social Policy and Society, 17, 1, 101–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campbell, J. and Oliver, M. (2013) Disability Politics: Understanding Our Past, Changing Our Future, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chaney, P. (2015) ‘Institutional ableism, critical actors and the substantive representation of disabled people: evidence from the UK Parliament 1940–2012’, The Journal of Legislative Studies, 21, 2, 168–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dodd, S. (2016) ‘Orientating disability studies to disablist austerity: applying Fraser’s insights’, Disability and Society, 31, 2, 149–65.Google Scholar
Dorfman, D. and Yabo, M. (2019) ‘The professionalization of urban accessibility’, Fordham Urban Law Journal, 47, 5, 1213–56.Google Scholar
Ebbinghaus, B. and Naumann, E. (2018) ‘Introduction: Analysing organized interests and public opinion towards welfare reforms’, in Ebbinghaus, B. and Naumann, E. (eds.), Welfare State Reforms Seen from Below: Comparing Public Attitudes and Organized Interests in Britain and Germany, Cham, Switzerland: Springer, 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, C. and Imrie, R. (2008) ‘Disability and the implications of the wellbeing agenda: some reflections from the United Kingdom’, Journal of Social Policy, 37, 3, 337–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ellis, K. (2007) ‘Direct payments and social work practice: the significance of ‘street-level bureaucracy’ in determining eligibility’, British Journal of Social Work, 37, 3, 405–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Esping-Andersen, G. (1985) Politics Against Markets: The Social Democratic Road to Power, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Esping-Andersen, G. (1990) The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Evans, E. and Reher, S. (2020) ‘Disability and political representation: analysing the obstacles to elected office in the UK’, International Political Science Review, DOI: doi.org/10.1177/0192512120947458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Finseraas, H. and Vernby, K. (2011) ‘What parties are and what parties do: partisanship and welfare state reform in an era of austerity’, Socio-Economic Review, 9, 4, 613–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gabel, S. (2005) Disability Studies in Education: Readings in Theory and Method, New York: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Geiger, B. B., Garthwaite, K., Warren, J. and Bambra, C. (2018) ‘Assessing work disability for social security benefits: international models for the direct assessment of work capacity’, Disability and Rehabilitation, 40, 24, 2962–70.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gjersøe, H. M. (2016) ‘Regulating inflow or outflow: a comparison of the work capability assessments in the UK and Norway’, Journal of Social Policy, 45, 1, 141–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glasby, J. (2014) ‘The controversies of choice and control: why some people might be hostile to English social care reforms’, British Journal of Social Work, 44, 2, 252–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodlad, R. and Riddell, S. (2005) ‘Social justice and disabled people: principles and challenges’, Social Policy and Society, 4, 1, 4554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodley, D. (2016) Disability Studies: An Interdisciplinary Introduction, London, UK: Sage.Google Scholar
Goodley, D., Lawthom, R. and Runswick-Cole, K. (2014) ‘Dis/ability and austerity: beyond work and slow death’, Disability and Society, 29, 6, 980–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hacker, J. S. (2004) ‘Privatizing risk without privatizing the welfare state: the hidden politics of social policy retrenchment in the United States’, American Political Science Review, 98, 2, 243–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hacker, J. S. and Pierson, P. (2002) ‘Business power and social policy: employers and the formation of the American welfare state’, Politics and Society, 30, 2, 277325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halvorsen, R., Hvinden, B., Brown, J. B., Biggeri, M., Tøssebro, J. and Waldschmidt, A. (2017) Understanding the Lived Experiences of Persons with Disabilities in Nine Countries: Active Citizenship and Disability in Europe, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holler, R. (2014) ‘Disability and employment policy in the Israeli welfare state: between exclusion and inclusion’, Disability and Society, 29, 9, 1369–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holler, R. (2020) ‘Material, stigmatic, and agentic dimensions in the experience of claiming disability benefits: the Israeli case’, Social Policy and Administration, 54, 5, 777–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Humphrey, J. (2017) Towards a Politics of the Rainbow: Self-Organization in the Trade Union Movement, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Humphrey, J. C. (2000) ‘Self-organization and trade union democracy’, The Sociological Review, 48, 2, 262–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hvinden, B. (2003) ‘The uncertain convergence of disability policies in Western Europe’, Social Policy and Administration, 37, 6, 609–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kalyvas, S. N. and van Kersbergen, K. (2010) ‘Christian democracy’, Annual Review of Political Science, 13, 1, 183209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korpi, W. (2006) ‘Power resources and employer-centered approaches in explanations of welfare states and varieties of capitalism: protagonists, consenters, and antagonists’, World Politics, 58, 2 167206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korpi, W. and Palme, J. (2003) ‘New politics and class politics in the context of austerity and globalization: welfare state regress in 18 countries, 1975–1995’, American Political Science Review, 97, 3, 2546.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kriesi, H. (2015) ‘Party systems, electoral systems, and social movements’, in Porta, D. D. and Diani, M. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Social Movements, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 667–80.Google Scholar
Kröger, T. (2009). Care research and disability studies: nothing in common?’, Critical Social Policy, 29, 3, 398420.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuipers, S. (2010) The Crisis Imperative: Crisis Rhetoric and Welfare State Reform in Belgium and the Netherlands in the Early 1990s, Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Kuznetsova, Y., Yalcin, B. and Priestley, M. (2017) ‘Labour market integration and equality for disabled people: a comparative analysis of Nordic and Baltic countries’, Social Policy and Administration, 51, 4, 577–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewin, L., Lewin, B., Bäck, H. and Westin, L. (2008) ‘A kinder, gentler democracy? The consensus model and Swedish disability politics’, Scandinavian Political Studies, 31, 3, 291310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lipsky, M. (2010) Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Service, Russell Sage Foundation.Google Scholar
Lister, R. (2004) Poverty, Cambridge: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Luna, Y. M. (2009) ‘Single welfare mothers’ resistance’, Journal of Poverty, 13, 4, 441–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lurie, L. (2017) ‘Do unions promote rights for people with disabilities?’, Indiana Journal of Law and Social Equality, 5, 2, 477–97.Google Scholar
Mackay, F., Kenny, M. and Chappell, L. (2010) ‘New institutionalism through a gender lens: towards a feminist institutionalism?’, International Political Science Review, 31, 5, 573–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marier, P. (2005) ‘Where did the bureaucrats go? Role and influence of the public bureaucracy in the Swedish and French pension reform debate’, Governance, 18, 4, 521–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. and Hayward, D. (2017) ‘Social policy ‘generosity’ at a time of fiscal austerity: the strange case of Australia’s National Disability Insurance Scheme’, Critical Social Policy, 37, 1, 128–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Millward, G. (2014) Invalid Definitions, Invalid Responses: Disability and the Welfare State, 1965-1995, London: London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.Google Scholar
Morris, Z. (2016) ‘Constructing the need for retrenchment: disability benefits in the United States and Great Britain’, Policy and Politics, 44, 4, 609–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadasen, P. (2014) Welfare Warriors: The Welfare Rights Movement in the United States, New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Obinger, H., Leibfried, S. and Castles, F. (2005) Federalism and the Welfare State: New World and European Experiences, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Obinger, H., Petersen, K. and Starke, P. (eds.) (2018) Warfare and Welfare: Military Conflict and Welfare State Development in Western Countries, Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O’Brien, R. (2001) Crippled Justice: The History of Modern Disability Policy in the Workplace, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Ohayon, Y. (2017) ‘The Israeli General Disability Insurance Program: the case study of Laron Law’, MA thesis, Hebrew University, Jerusalem.Google Scholar
Oliver, M. and Barnes, C. (2012) The New Politics of Disablement, Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliver, M. and Zarb, G. (1989) ‘The politics of disability: a new approach’, Disability, Handicap and Society, 4, 3, 221–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piccio, D. R. (2016) ‘The impact of social movements on political parties’, in Bosi, L., Giugni, M. and Uba, K. (eds.), The Consequences of Social Movements, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 263–84.Google Scholar
Pierson, P. (1998) ‘Irresistible forces, immovable objects: post-industrial welfare states confront permanent austerity’, Journal of European Public Policy, 5, 4, 539–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pierson, P. (2004) Politics in Time: History, Institutions, and Social Analysis, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pinto, P. C. (2018) ‘From rights to reality: of crisis, coalitions, and the challenge of implementing disability rights in Portugal’, Social Policy and Society, 17, 1, 133–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Priestley, M. (2000) ‘Adults only: disability, social policy and the life course’, Journal of Social Policy, 29, 3, 421–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Priestley, M. (2010) ‘Disability’, in Castles, F. G., Leibfried, S., Lewis, J., Obinger, H. and Pierson, C. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Welfare State, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 406420.Google Scholar
Priestley, M., Stickings, M., Loja, E., Grammenos, S., Lawson, A., Waddington, L. and Fridriksdottir, B. (2016) ‘The political participation of disabled people in Europe: rights, accessibility and activism’, Electoral Studies, 42, 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roulstone, A. and Morgan, H. (2009) ‘Neo-liberal individualism or self-directed support: are we all speaking the same language on modernising adult social care?’, Social Policy and Society, 8, 3, 333–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rummery, K. and Glendinning, C. (2000) ‘Access to services as a civil and social rights issue: the role of welfare professionals in regulating access to and commissioning services for disabled and older people under New Labour’, Social Policy and Administration, 34, 5, 529–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schur, L., Ameri, M. and Adya, M. (2017) ‘Disability, voter turnout, and polling place accessibility’, Social Science Quarterly, 98, 5, 1374–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, J. (2008) Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Shakespeare, T. (2013) Disability Rights and Wrongs Revisited, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Starke, P. (2006) ‘The politics of welfare state retrenchment: a literature review’, Social Policy and Administration, 40, 1, 104–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, D. A. (1986) The Disabled State, Philadelphia: Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Swain, J. and French, S. (2001) ‘The relationship between disabled people and health and welfare professionals’, in Gary, L. A., Katherine, D. S. and Michael, B. (eds.), Handbook of Disability Studies, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 734–53.Google Scholar
Teglbjærg, J. H., Mamali, F. C., Chapman, M. and Dammeyer, J. (2021) ‘The disability gap in voter turnout and its association to the accessibility of election information in EU countries’, Disability and Society, DOI: doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2021.1877116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thill, C. (2015) ‘Listening for policy change: how the voices of disabled people shaped Australia’s National disability insurance scheme’, Disability and Society, 30, 1, 1528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, C. (2007) Sociologies of Disability and Illness: Contested Ideas in Disability Studies and Medical Sociology, Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tregaskis, C. (2002) ‘Social model theory: the story so far’, Disability and Society, 17, 4, 457–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tschanz, C. and Staub, I. (2017) ‘Disability-policy models in European welfare regimes: comparing the distribution of social protection, labour-market integration and civil rights’, Disability and Society, 32, 8, 11991215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Kersbergen, K. (2003) Social Capitalism: A Study of Christian Democracy and the Welfare State, London: Routledge.Google Scholar
van Kersbergen, K. (2006) ‘The politics of solidarity and the changing boundaries of the welfare state’, European Political Science, 5, 4, 377–94.Google Scholar
van Kersbergen, K. and Vis, B. (2014) Comparative Welfare State Politics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Waddington, L. (2018) Disability Assessment in European States: ANED Synthesis Report, https://sid.usal.es/idocs/F8/FDO27447/ANED_2017_18_Disability_assessment_synthesis_report.pdf [accessed 29.05.2022].CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waldschmidt, A., Karačić, A., Sturm, A. and Dins, T. (2015) ‘“Nothing about us without us” disability rights activism in European countries–a comparative analysis’, Moving the Social, 53, 103–38.Google Scholar
Williams, F. (2015) ‘Towards the welfare commons: contestation, critique and criticality in social policy’, in Irwing, Z., Fenger, M. and Hudson, J. (eds.), Social Policy Review 27 Analysis and Debate in Social Policy, Bristol: Policy Press, 93111.Google Scholar
Williams, F. (2016) ‘Critical thinking in social policy: the challenges of past, present and future’, Social Policy and Administration, 50, 6, 628–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yu, N. G. (2014) ‘Ableism and economic rationalism in Australian immigration’, International Journal of Social Welfare, 23, 3, 254–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar