RESEARCH INFORMATION ON INDEPENDENT
LIVING
Permission
granted to reproduce. Please cite source
Volume
1, Issue 10
ADA Literature Review
Many ADA publications concentrate on
its five titles, while others look at the act's implementation in specific
instances such as gasoline stations, the adoption of children, or recreation.
ADA has been formally measured by Lou Harris surveys and its impact critiqued by
advocates, opponents, scientific researchers, and, to a far lesser extent, the
general press. Throughout these analyses is the perception that ADA is a
laudatory tool to contest discrimination and has forced society to view
disability as a civil rights issue, but active enforcement and much more change
is needed for the full participation of people with disabilities in their
communities.
The federal government through its
offices (e.g., The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the U.S. General
Accounting Office) and grant projects has been the source of much ADA
information. The government's publication goal has been to make ADA and its
provisions understandable and known to the public.
For example, the President's Committee
on the Employment of People With Disabilities offers "Focus on" ADA
brochures with information on telecommunications, disabled veterans,
transportation, and other applicable subjects.
The U.S. Department of Justice also
provides ADA documents such as regulations, guides, and technical assistance
manuals with spotlight, too, on specialized subjects.
The country's ten Disability and
Business Technical Peer Assistance Centers, funded by the National Institute on
Disability Rehabilitation Research, have generated their own relevant
publications and pulled together ADA information from many sources for their
audiences. Of special note are each of the center's newsletters with timely
information about ADA cases, settlements, and local resources.
Disability organizations, some funded
all or in part by the government, too, have produced ADA information materials,
often in relation to specific populations. For example, the and Family Training
Network Project publishes the ADA Guide
for Families and the American Foundation for the Blind & the National
Center on Law and Deafness offers the "Obligations" series (e.g., Obligations
of Nursing Homes to Hearing Impaired Patients, etc.). One of the most vocal
publishers has been the National Council on Disability, a co-writer of the ADA,
which has monitored the ADA in reports, including the recent titled Promises
to Keep: A Decade of Federal Enforcement of the Americans with Disabilities Act that
decries lack of enforcement and unified vision by federal agencies.
Researchers, once again many funded by
government grants, have written extensively about ADA as it has been tested in
daily living and shaped by court cases. In articles on employment, housing, or
other relevant topics, ADA may appear as a reference in progress measurement.
As for the general media, commercial
publishers, for the most part, have produced technical, "how-to"
books. A quick scan of www.Amazon.com
turns up more than a hundred titles, the majority about compliance issues and
specific guidelines.
Newspapers tend to report on U.S.
Supreme Court and other federal and state court rulings and their effect on ADA
implementation and compliance such as the recent setback case of Chevron v.
Echazabal. On the business and
trade magazine front, interestingly articles have commonly reported surprise at
how painless ADA compliance has been and how to ensure compliancy.
Often, the most cutting-edge, concise,
and intriguing reports come from the disability press and newsletters. The
answer to "what does this really mean?" is found in these publications
as is related, practical information. — Cindy
Higgins, The Research and Training Center on Independent Living, The University
of Kansas. This project funded by National Institute on Disability
Rehabilitation Research grant #H133A980048.
A
version of this publication also appeared in SCI/Life.
Information for this review came
from the interactive Research Information on Independent Living (RIIL) database
at www.GetRiil. org, which contains
research summaries related to independent living with disabilities. A special
effort has been made to include information that independent leaders in the
field said they wanted, namely topics regarding accessible, affordable housing,
effective advocacy for rural areas, effective transition from schools and
nursing homes, accessible, affordable transportation, reaching underserved
populations, policies that impede independent living, rural health care
services, and Medicaid/Medicare regulations for durable equipment.
RIIL is a joint effort of the
Research and Training Center on Independent Living at the University of Kansas
and the Independent Living Research Utilization (ILRU) Program of TIRR.
Journal articles studying ADA often point out its barriers. A common
discovery has been that a variety of people impacted by ADA are ignorant or
confused by its contents.
“The Americans With Disabilities Act
has proven to be an excellent example of a civil rights approach—one that
encompasses a level playing field, the removal of physical and societal
barriers, universal design, and a supportive government ready to enforce
penalties to those who refuse to cooperate—to disability policy.
Source: Zeitzer, I (1999, June). Civil
rights for people with disabilities: A new paradigm for the last half century.
International Rehabilitation Review
49 (1&2).