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{{POV section|date=May 2018}}
During the mid to late 20th century, people with disabilities were met with fear, stigma, and pity. Their opportunities for a full productive life were minimal at best and often emphasis was placed more on personal characterizes that could be enhanced so the attention was taken from their disability <ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Groomes & Linkowski|first=D. A. G., & D. C.|date=2007|title=Examining the structure of the revised acceptance disability scale|journal=Journal of Rehabilitation|volume=73|pages=3–9|id={{ProQuest|236273029}}}}</ref> Linkowski developed the Acceptance of Disability Scale (ADS) during this time to help measure a
Bogdan and Taylor's (1993)<ref name=":0" /> acceptance of sociology, which states that a person need not be defined by personal characterizes alone, has become influential in helping persons with disabilities to refuse to accept exclusion from mainstream society.<ref name=":0" /> According to some disability
===Personal wounds, quality of life and social role valorization===
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== Misconceptions ==
Normalization is so common in the fields of disability, especially intellectual and developmental disabilities, that articles will critique normalization without ever referencing one of three international leaders: Wolfensberger, Nirje, and Bank Mikkelson or any of the women educators (e.g., Wolfensberger's Susan Thomas; Syracuse University colleagues Taylor, Biklen or Bogdan; established women academics (e.g., Sari Biklen); or emerging women academics, Traustadottir, Shoultz or Racino in national research and education centers (e.g., Hillyer, 1993).<ref>Hillyer, B. (1993). ''Feminism and Disability''. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma.</ref> In particular, this may be because Racino (with Taylor) leads an international field on community integration (See,
* a) '''Normalization does not mean making people normal – forcing them to conform to societal norms'''.
Wolfensberger himself, in 1980, suggested "Normalizing measures can be offered in some circumstances, and imposed in others."<ref>''The definition of normalisation: update, problems, disagreements and misunderstandings'', Wolfensberger, W. (1980) In R.J. Flynn & K.E. Nitsch (Eds). Normalization, social integration and human services. Baltimore: University Park Press</ref> This view is not accepted by most people in the field, including Nirje. Advocates emphasize that the ''environment'', not the ''person'', is what is normalized, or as known for decades a person-environment interaction.
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==Further reading==
* "The Principle of Normalization: History and Experiences in Scandinavian Countries," Kent Ericsson. Presentation ILSMH Congress, Hamburg 1985.
* "Setting the record straight: a critique of some frequent misconceptions of the normalization principle", Perrin, B. & Nirje, B., ''Australia and New Zealand Journal of Developmental Disabilities'', 1985, Vol 11, No. 2,
* A comprehensive review of research conducted with the program evaluation instruments PASS and PASSING. (1999). In: R. Flynn & R. LeMay, "A Quarter Century of Normalization and Social Role Valorization: Evolution and Impact". (pp. 317–349). Ottawa, Canada: University of Ottawa Press.
* The social origins of normalisation by Simon Whitehead in the reader Normalisation from Europe by Hillary Brown and Helen Smith (1992, Routledge). Foreword by Linda Ward. Reader includes references to Wolfensberger, John O'Brien (Citizen advocacy, Frameworks for accomplishment), Syracuse University Training Institute (European PASS workshops), Australian Training and Evaluation for Change Association, and Great Britain's Community and Mental Handicap Educational and Research Associates, among others.
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* Nirje, B. (1969). Chapter 7: The normalisation principle and its human management implications. Kugel, R. & Wolfensberger, W. (Eds.), ''Changing Patterns in Residential Services for the Mentally Retarded''. Washington, DC: President's Committee on Mental Retardation.
* Nirje, B. (1970). The Normalization Principle: Implications and comments. Symposium on "Normalization. ''Midland Society for the Study of Abnormality'', 16(62-70).
* Wolfensberger, W. (1970). The principle of normalization and its implications to psychiatric services. ''American Journal of Psychiatry'', 127:3,
* Wolfesnberger, W. (1973). The future of residential services for the mentally retarded. ''Journal of Clinical Child Psychology'', 2(1):
* Wolfensberger, W. (1975). ''The Origin and Nature of Our Institutional Models''. Syracuse, NY: Human Policy Press.
* Wolfensberger, W. (1976). Will there always be an institution? The impact of epidemiological trends. (pp. 399–414). In: M. Rosen, G.R. Clark, & M.S. Hivitz, ''The History of Mental Retardation: Collected Papers: Volume 2''. Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brookes.
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