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SECTION 3: APPROACHES TO HELPING WITH END OF LIFE CHALLENGES

Death Does Not Become Us

The Absence of Death and Dying in Intellectual Disability Research

Pages 225-239 | Received 03 Apr 2001, Accepted 23 Jun 2001, Published online: 11 Oct 2008
 

Abstract

The social issues of death, dying and bereavement represent important but neglected research areas, and such issues need attention both for practical reform and for deciphering what living with intellectual disability entails. The difficulties which life poses for people with intellectual disabilities may well persist in the times before and after death. As research issues they offer not only potential practical significance, but also a means of determining the social status and value of people with intellectual disabilities. This paper reviews the issues of death and dying from the viewpoint of sociological research and seeks to identify the ways death and dying have been treated within the research literature on living with intellectual disability. It is suggested that these issues have been discounted with some important consequences for the way intellectual disability is perceived. Important areas for research in this area are highlighted.

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