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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 20, 2007 |
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Mental
Retardation Is No More—New Name Is Intellectual and
Developmental Disabilities |
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| Name
change reflects society's efforts to appropriately address people
with cognitive disabilities |
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Washington,
DC (February 20, 2007)—After almost 5 decades of being called
Mental Retardation, this influential journal in special
education changed names to Intellectual & Developmental
Disabilities under the leadership of Editor Steven J. Taylor.
The journal's name change is a microcosm of society's ongoing
struggle to find a socially acceptable way of addressing persons
with an intellectual disability. The new name comes close on the
heels of the name change of its publisher, the American Association
on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, formerly AAMR, the
world's oldest organization representing professionals in
developmental disabilities.
For all those who ask, "What's
in a name?" Dr. Taylor says, "The term intellectual and
developmental disabilities is simply less stigmatizing than
mental retardation, mental deficiency, feeble-mindedness, idiocy,
imbecility, and other terminology we have cast aside over the
years." However, Taylor acknowledges that the crux of the issue here
goes beyond language and terminology into the deeper issues of
inclusion and acceptance of people with intellectual disabilities in
society. He explains, "Anyone who believes that we have finally
arrived at the perfect terminology will be proven wrong by history.
I am sure that at some future point we will find the phrase
intellectual and developmental disabilities to be inadequate
and demeaning."
Vice-president of AAIDD, Steve Eidelman, like
many other experts, goes a step further and calls for a public
education campaign to foster more positive attitudes towards people
with intellectual disabilities. In
an article published in a past issue of IDD, he said,
"Changing the term (mental retardation) will make many people
happy. That happiness will quickly fade when the new term is used as
a pejorative. Without a long-term effort to include everyone and to
educate those with negative or neutral attitudes toward our
constituents, a change in terminology will become the new pejorative
very quickly." Eidelman's comments were made in the midst of a
debate on the name change of AAMR to its current day name, AAIDD.
Founded in 1963, Intellectual & Developmental
Disabilities quickly became the leading journal for research and
opinion on practical issues faced by professionals working with
people who have cognitive disabilities. The tagline of "Journal of
Policy, Practice, and Perspectives" reflects the unique editorial
role of IDD in the field of developmental disabilities. The
journal is noteworthy for Perspectives, a selection of
articles hand-picked by the editor to reflect voices not usually
represented in empirical research. Also, the column Trends &
Milestones contains ready-to-use, quantitative data for
researchers and policymakers on pressing issues such as public
funding of disability programs and the decline of population in
state institutions over the past several decades.
Over the
years, Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities has
shaped public consensus in the disability field by featuring
rigorous debates on contentious topics. A
series of articles in the late 1990s on the mortality of people
living in institutions dispelled the commonly held belief that the
community was unsafe for people with intellectual disabilities. More
recently, IDD featured studies on how family contact and
consumer-directed supports had better economic, health, and social
outcomes on lives of people with developmental disabilities as
opposed to being confined to institutions. Arguably, among the most
memorable are the impassioned articles by Robert Perske, a tireless
advocate for people with intellectual disabilities in the criminal
justice system. The powerful prose of Perske is reflected in
articles such as, "We
Believe Richard Lapointe Did Not Kill Bernice Martin," "Search
for Persons With Intellectual Disabilities Who Confessed to Serious
Crimes They Did Not Commit," and "Deception
in the Interrogation Room."
Readers of IDD
welcomed the name change:
"I think the new masthead on one
of the most widely read and influential journals in our field will
play an important role in promoting wider adoption of new, less
offending terminologies," says Charlie Lakin, a noted researcher at
the University of Minnesota.
"It is heartening to anticipate
the first issue of the journal flying under a new flag—IDD.
The journal ... has recently extended its sweep to capture new
knowledge across an array of topics: therapies, statistical data,
the history of intellectual disabilities, ideas from the
interdisciplinary field of disability studies and more ...becoming
more global in scope. Long may it flourish," says Patricia Noonan
Walsh, Professor at the Centre for Disability Studies in
Ireland.
Click
here to read a list of articles in the current issue of
Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities. Click
here for subscription information or call (785)-843-1235.
Founded in 1876, AAIDD promotes progressive policies,
sound research, effective practices, and universal human rights for
people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. To learn
about AAIDD, visit http://www.aaidd.org/. |
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American
Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities 444
North Capitol Street NW Suite 846, Washington, D.C.
20001-1512 Tel (202)387-1968 | Fax (202)387-2193 | http://www.aaidd.org/ |
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