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Les Enfants Perdus

Asylum Reform, Parents’ Groups, and Disability Rights in France, 1968–1975

Jonathyne Briggs

deinstitutionalization, which focused on closing down facilities housing the mentally disabled, developed throughout the Western world in the postwar period, but these efforts followed a different trajectory in France than elsewhere. While the public recognition of

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Sexuality, Masculinity, and Intellectual Disability

Beyond a Focus on Regulation and Vicarious Illusions

Nathan J. Wilson and David Charnock

, was limited due not only to the focus on people with milder degrees of intellectual disability, but also to an overt focus on exploring stigma, labeling, and the social policy of deinstitutionalization at the expense of actually interacting and

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City Sterilization and Poverty Management

Examining a Mobility Hub in the “Redevelopment and Enhancement” of Downtown Tallahassee

Christopher M. McLeod, Matthew I. Horner, Matthew G. Hawzen, and Mark DiDonato

): 550–558, here 551. 11 Michael J. Dear and Jennifer Wolch, Landscapes of Despair: From Deinstitutionalization to Homelessness (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1987). 12 Mair, “The Homeless and the Post-Industrial City.” 13 Susan K