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Book Reviews

Re-thinking autism: diagnosis, identity and equality

Re-thinking autism: diagnosis, identity and equality, edited by Katherine Runswick-Cole, Rebecca Mallet and Sami Timimi, London, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2016, 336 pp., £18.99 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-78-450027-6

References

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  • Bracher, M. 2013. Living with a Diagnosis – Formation of Pre-Diagnostic Identity in the Lives of as People Diagnosed in Adulthood [ doctoral thesis]. Southampton: University of Southampton.
  • Chown, N. 2014. “More on the Ontological Status of Autism and the Double Empathy Problem.” Disability and Society 29 (10): 1672–1676.10.1080/09687599.2014.949625
  • Davidson, J., and M. Orsini, eds. 2013. Worlds of Autism. Minnesota: University of Minnesota.
  • Greenstein, A. 2014. “Theorising Autism Project – Engaging Autistic People in the Research Process. Review of a Seminar Day at the Institute of Education.” Autonomy, the Critical Journal of Interdisciplinary Autism Studies 1(3), [online]. Accessed May 22, 2016. http://www.larry-arnold.net/Autonomy/index.php/autonomy/article/view/RE4.
  • Hughes, B. 2009. “Disability Activism: Social Model Stalwarts and Biological Citizens.” Disability and Society 24 (6): 677–688.10.1080/09687590903160118
  • Jaarsma, P., and S. Welin. 2012. “Autism as a Natural Variation: Reflections on the Claims of the Neurodiversity Movement.” Health Care Analysis 20 (1): 20–30.10.1007/s10728-011-0169-9
  • Lawson, W. 2008. Concepts of Normality: The Autistic and Typical Spectrum. London: Jessica Kingsley.
  • Lawson, W. 2010. The Passionate Mind: How People with Autism Learn. London: Jessica Kingsley.
  • Milton, D. 2012. “On the Ontological Status of Autism: The ‘Double Empathy Problem’.” Disability and Society 27 (6): 883–887.10.1080/09687599.2012.710008
  • Milton, D. 2014. “Autistic Expertise: A Critical Reflection on the Production of Knowledge in Autism Studies.” Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice (Special Edition ‘Autism and Society’) 18(7): 794–802.10.1177/1362361314525281
  • Murray, D. 1992. “Attention Tunnelling and Autism.” In Living with Autism: The Individual, the Family and the Professional, edited by P. Shattock, and G. Linfoot, 183–193. Sunderland: The University of Sunderland-Autism Research Unit.
  • Murray, D., M. Lesser, and W. Lawson. 2005. “Attention, Monotropism and the Diagnostic Criteria for Autism.” Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice 9(2): 136–156.
  • Runswick-Cole, K. 2014. ““Us” and “Them”? the Limits and Possibilities of a Politics of Neurodiversity in Neoliberal times.” Disability and Society 29 (7): 1117–1129.
  • Timimi, S., N. Gardner, and B. McCabe. 2011. The Myth of Autism. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
  • Yergeau, M. 2013. “Clinically Significant Disturbance: On Theorists Who Theorize Theory of Mind.” Disability Studies Quarterly 33(4), [online]. Accessed May 22, 2016. http://dsq-sds.org/article/view/3876/3405.

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