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Dementia and Human Rights

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Dementia and Human Rights Synopsis

The time has come to further challenge biomedical and clinical thinking about dementia, which has for so long underpinned policy and practice. Framing dementia as a disability, this book takes a rights-based approach to expand the debate. Applying a social constructionist lens, it builds on earlier critical perspectives by bringing together concepts including disability, social inclusion, personhood, equality, participation, dignity, empowerment, autonomy and solidarity. Launching the debate into new and exciting territory, the book argues that people living with dementia come within the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and therefore have full entitlement to all the rights the Convention enshrines. A human rights-based approach has not to date been fully applied to interrogate the lived experience and policy response to dementia. With the fresh analytical tools provided in this book, policy makers and practitioners will will gain new insights into how this broader perspective can be used to further promote the quality of life and quality of care for all those affected by dementia.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781447331407
Publication date: 28th March 2018
Author: Suzanne (Trinity College Dublin, NUI Galway and University of Jonkoping Sweden Dementia Services Information and Develo Cahill
Publisher: Policy Press an imprint of Bristol University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 252 pages
Genres: Age groups: the elderly
Care of the elderly
Human rights, civil rights