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  • Contested housing landscapes? Deinstitutionalisation, community care and housing policy in Australia

    Author(s)
    Bostock, Lisa
    Gleeson, Brendan
    McPherson, Ailsa
    Pang, Lillian
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Gleeson, Brendan J.
    Year published
    2004
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Deinstitutionalisation is represented as a major step toward social inclusion through the resettlement of disabled people residing in segregated large-scale institutions into community-based homes. By promoting the right to live in ordinary community residential settings, deinstitutionalisation fundamentally changes both the support services and housing arrangements of former institutional residents. In Australia, as in many western countries, debates on community care have tended to focus on the location and nature of non-housing supports for people leaving dependent care. This focus, however, overlooks the fact that ...
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    Deinstitutionalisation is represented as a major step toward social inclusion through the resettlement of disabled people residing in segregated large-scale institutions into community-based homes. By promoting the right to live in ordinary community residential settings, deinstitutionalisation fundamentally changes both the support services and housing arrangements of former institutional residents. In Australia, as in many western countries, debates on community care have tended to focus on the location and nature of non-housing supports for people leaving dependent care. This focus, however, overlooks the fact that deinstitutionalisation involves a radical rehousing of people in care. This paper explores the character and implications of deinstitutionalisation in Australia as a rehousing process. It is based on a recent national research project that has examined the housing futures of people with intellectual disabilities who have been, or will be, deinstitutionalised. The paper considers the increasingly divergent socio-political perspectives that have emerged in recent discussions about social inclusion, institutional reform and independent living and their implications for housing and community care policies.
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    Journal Title
    Australian Journal of Social Issues
    Volume
    39
    Issue
    1
    Publisher URI
    http://www.aspa.org.au/ajsi/
    Subject
    Studies in Human Society
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/54985
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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