MATERIALIST AND
POLITICAL ECONOMY THEORIES
THE PRODUCTION
OF DISABILITY
POLITICAL ECONOMY AND NATIONAL RESPONSES TO
DISABILITY
THE DISABILITY INDUSTRY
100

These theories argue that the resources needed to survive and the economy determine social relationships, culture, and disability.

What are materialist theories?

100

This is the national prioritization of the preparation for war, which diverts money away from health care and human welfare.

What is militarism?

100

Early in American history, people with disabilities were subjected to this system in which people seen as competent held the authority to make decisions for them.

What is paternalism?

100

The disability industry has shifted from family care to a marketplace selling ________.

What are commodities?

200

This is characterized by private ownership of the mode of production, mass production, and the expansive commodification of resources for sale in the marketplace.

What is capitalism?

200

Wallerstein argues that this theory helps explain why low-income nations concentrated in the Global South have disproportionately been affected by mass poverty, disease, and disability. 

What is World Systems Theory?

200

These are the three common political/economic responses to disability.

What are exclusion, the provision of benefits, and the promotion of civil rights and inclusion?

200

These approaches argue that all people, citizens, and non-citizens, should have the rights and basic resources necessary to live dignified and fulfilling lives.

What are the human rights approaches?

300

In feudal Europe, life was hard for most people and disability was common, but in some ways disability was less _______  than it is today.

What is meaningful?

300

Compared to the early days of capitalism, work is now __________ in many ways.

What is safer?

300

These programs value the ideal of self-sufficiency through employment.

What are social welfare programs?

300

This movement centers on the experiences of the most marginalized people and aims to achieve collective access and liberation, leaving no one behind.

What is disability justice?

400

The desire for profit erases the sense of capitalists' obligation to care for the _________ who produce the goods of the society.

Who are the workers?

400

This political and economic philosophy promotes individual freedom based on a laissez-faire approach to capitalism with little government regulation or public provision of services, contributing to high rates of poverty in the U.S.

What is neoliberalism?

400

This group of people is portrayed as able but unwilling to work.

Who are the undeserving poor?

400

One criticism of the Disability Rights Movement was that leaders prioritized rights over _____________ and the provision of a social safety net. 

What is intersectional oppression?

500

This concept suggests that the government and economy are interconnected so that state policies usually serve the interests of elites/capitalists.

What is political economy?

500

Eighty percent of the world’s people with disabilities live in _________ countries.

What is low-income?

500

These rights ensure the freedom to act as one wishes without state intervention.

What are negative rights?

500

This treaty provides a framework by which to implement a human rights approach for people with disabilities.

What is the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)? 

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