This article reports research that connects the core concepts of health care policy and the four related health care principles (benevolence, nonmaleficence, autonomy, and justice) to prior research on the core concepts of disability policy and a framework that reflects constitutional, ethical, and administrative principles.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
Stowe, M., & Turnbull, H.R. (2001). Tools for analyzing policy “on the books” and policy “on the streets.” Journal of DisabilityPolicy Studies, 12, 206—214.
2.
Turnbull, H.R., Beegle, G., & Stowe, M. (2001). The core concepts of disability policy affecting families who have children with disabilities. Journal of DisabilityPolicy Studies, 12, 133—143.
3.
Turnbull, H.R., & Stowe, M. (2001a). A taxonomy for organizing the core concepts according to their underlying principles. Journal of DisabilityPolicy Studies, 12, 177—197.
4.
Turnbull, H.R., & Stowe, M. (2001b). Five models for understanding how professionals, policy leaders, researchers, and families and individuals with disabilities think about the meaning of and about societal responses to disability. Journal of DisabilityPolicy Studies, 12, 198—205.
5.
Turnbull, H.R., Wilcox, B., Stowe, M., & Umbarger, G. (2001). Matrix of federal statutes and federal and state court decisions reflecting the core concepts of disability policy. Journal of DisabilityPolicy Studies, 12, 144—176.