GROWING UP WITH
PARENTS WHO HAVE LEARNING DIFFICULTIES
Tim Booth and Wendy Booth
Growing Up with
Parents who have Learning Difficulties challenges us to think
again about many taken-for-granted ideas about the process of
parenting, the roles of parents, especially disabled parents,
and the needs of children. Observing children under pressure
reveals the extent of their resilience. Studying parents on the
margins of competence provides new insights into the limits of
parental adequacy.
Growing Up with
Parents who have Learning Difficulties uses a life-story approach
to present new evidence about how children from such families
manage the transition to adulthood, and about the longer-term
outcomes of such an upbringing. It offers a view of parental
competence as a social attribute rather than an individual skill,
assessing the implications for institutional policies and practices.
The authors address the notion of children having to parent their
disabled parents and argue for a shift in emphasis from protecting
children to supporting families.
Growing Up with
Parents who have Learning Difficulties provides a fresh approach
to a subject rife with prejudice. It also demonstrates the power
of narrative research and its capacity for bringing alive people's
experience in a way that enables us to better understand their
lives. The book will be of particular interest to professionals
and academics working with people who have learning difficulties.
April1998 : 232pp
ISBN 0 425 16655 1 Hbk Order your hardback copy here
ISBN 0 415 16656 X Pb Order your paperback copy here
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