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549 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 8 (1997)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0549 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is an expression of the concept
that persons with disabilities are a minority subject to discrimination based
on the prejudices of others. The analogy was born during the 1960s from the
struggle to eliminate discrimination against African Americans. The groups
of persons with disabilities who fought for the ADA and its predecessor, the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, were typically persons with visible impairments,
many of which limited mobility. The ADA was clearly intended to provide
entitlements to the persons represented by the advocacy groups, and little
attention was given to the large number of persons who are identified as part
of the disabled community by national surveys.
Information presented in this volume demonstrates that the suits filed
under the provisions of the ADA are more likely to come from the larger
population than from the target group envisioned by the ADA's supporters.
The larger group consists of persons, typically middle-aged or older, with
nonvisible impairments, such as arthritis, cardiovascular conditions or
chronic back pain, that first occurred during adulthood. The distinction
between these groups is one of many differences between persons with
disabilities. Some of the other differences discussed in the articles that follow
are the special situation of persons with disabilities who are doubly disad-
vantaged because they also suffer discrimination based on age, ethnicity, or
gender or they have few skills and little education.
One theme that emerges from the articles in this issue is the need to
understand that there are important differences between the various seg-
ments of the population of persons with disabilities and that policies and
programs that do not reflect the differences are unlikely to succeed. The
benefits of antidiscrimination policies, such as the ADA, are believed to
benefit a relatively small part of the population of persons with disabilities.
An exception is the provision for reasonable accommodation, which, several
authors suggest, could benefit a much larger portion of the persons with
disabilities who seek employment or reemployment following an episode of
work disability.
Another theme expressed in several articles extends beyond specific issues
related to persons with disabilities. It is the question of what constitutes
appropriate social entitlements for persons with disabilities and how these
entitlements ought to differ across subgroups of the population. What is, for
example, the appropriate balance between self-reliance and government
intervention? Is employment a socially desirable outcome of such importance
that it outweighs efficiency-based comparisons of the value of outputs to the
costs of production?

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