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Holistic Policymaking: "Neo-Liberalism" as Illustrated by the Women's and Disability Rights Movements
Authors:Sara D Watson
Institution:Sara Watson, MPP, PhD, is a senior associate at the Center for the Study of Social Policy. She can be contacted at Center for the Study of Social Policy, 1250 I St., NW, Suite 503, Washington, DC 20005.
Abstract:The past several decades have seen the rise of two movements, the disability rights movement and the women's movement, with parallel concerns, histories, organizational issues, and other attributes. This article examines the philosophies of the two movements and their significance for the policymaking process. For example, both have struggled with the issues of difference versus equality in determining public policy; both stress the importance of considering problems to reside not in personal characteristics but in interactions with the environment. The article traces these and other similarities in ways of looking at policy problems between the women's movement and the disability movement, examines how these similarities reveal a fundamentally different view of policymaking, compares this philosophy with basic tenets of the Clinton administration, as expressed by key policymakers, and discusses what policy would look like if these changes occurred.
Keywords:
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