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A Taxonomy for Organizing the Core Concepts According to Their Underlying Principles
Turnbull, H. Rutherford, III ; Stowe, Matthew J.
Turnbull, H. Rutherford, III
Stowe, Matthew J.
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Abstract
This article organizes and classifies the 18 core concepts. There are nine overarching principles into which the concepts fit: life, liberty, equality, dignity, family as foundation, community, capacity, individualization, and accountability. These in turn reflect three approaches to policy: the Constitutional approach, consisting of the principles of life, liberty, and equality; the Ethical approach, consisting of the principles of dignity, family as foundation, and community; and the administrative approach, consisting of the principles of capacity, individualization, and accountability. There is also a set of Professional principles, which the article illustrates with examples from the field of medicine/health care. Finally, the article demonstrates how the organization and classification of the core concepts create a wholistic, unified approach to policy.
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2001
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Journal of Disability Policy Studies
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Turnbull, H.R., & Stowe, M.J. (2001). A taxonomy for organizing core concepts according to their underlying principles. Journal of Disability Policy Studies, 12(3), 177-197. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/104420730101200304
