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Original Articles

Changing Attitudes to Disabled People in the Scout Association in Britain (1908-62): A contribution to a history of disability

Pages 281-294 | Published online: 01 Jul 2010
 

Abstract

This paper suggests that an historical analysis of attitudes to disabled people is an important but neglected area of study. Attitudes to disabled people will change over time and policy makers within organisations and the general public will be influenced by a variety of social factors. Governmental policies and legislation may prove of minor influence or trigger unexpected change in organisational attitudes. An examination of policy in the disability section of the Scout Association and its approach to disabled scouts illustrates the complexity of influences on organisational policy over time. Documentary evidence suggests that the Association was promoting integration of disabled scouts into the wider organisation during the inter war period when national policies promoted segregation. However in 1959, when major segregative legislation was repealed, there was a change of policy to exclude a particular group of disabled people-that is people with learning difficulties-from full membership.

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