Article

Feminist Review (1995) 51, 68–93. doi:10.1057/fr.1995.34

Creating a Space for Absent Voices: Disabled Women's Experience of Receiving Assistance with Daily Living Activities

Jenny Morris is a freelance researcher and author of Pride Against Prejudice: Transforming Attitudes to Disability and Independent Lives: Community Care and Disabled People. She also edited Able Lives?: Women's Experience of Paralysis and Alone Together: Voices of Single Mothers. She has compiled a collection of writings by disabled feminists entitled Feminism and Disability, published by The Women's Press.

With thanks to Nasa Begum and Lois Keith for their comments on this article.

Jenny Morris

Top

Abstract

Feminist research on community care and 'informal carers' identified this as a women's issue but failed to address the interests and experiences of older and disabled women - those who received 'care'. One consequence is that such feminist research has implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, undermined disabled women's rights to a home, children and personal relationships. Using qualitative research, the article highlights the actual experience of women whose physical impairment means that they need help with daily living activities, looking at the different circumstances in which such help is received.

The disability movement's concept of 'independent living' raises particular issues for disabled women. 'Independent living' is about having choice and control over the assistance needed, rather than necessarily doing everything for yourself. However, gender inequalities may also inhibit the choice and control that women have in their lives.

Assistance can be given within a personal relationship as an expression of love, but disabled women may also experience abusive, restrictive or exploitative relationships. Public services do not generally provide assistance in a way which enables a woman to have choice and control in her life, or even to carry out child-caring or homemaking tasks. The research on the various ways of receiving personal assistance found that those women who were able to purchase their own help were most likely to be living independently, in the sense of exerting choice and control in their lives.

Feminist research can help to create a space for disabled women's absent voices, and add to the pressure for change in the way that personal assistance needs are met. This is a human and civil rights issue which has a key impact on the control that disabled women have over their lives.

Keywords:

Disabled women, feminist research, community care, independent living, qualitative research, disability

Extra navigation

.

FR resources

ADVERTISEMENT
Feminist Theory & Activism in Global Perspective
Link to Complete Online Archive
Power, movements, change - Development vol. 52 issue 2, June 2009
Sexuality and Development - Development Volume 54, Issue 2, March 2009
Postmedieval - a journal of medieval cultural studies, new in 2010