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The shops were only made for people who could walk’: impairment, barriers and autonomy in the mobility of adults with Cerebral Palsy in urban England

Status of Publication: Published/Completed
Date produced: 2020
Authoring organisation/Author affiliation: North Star Consultancy;Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University;School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Plymouth
Individual author(s): Bonehill J, von Benzon N, Shaw J
Type of Resource: Research
Impairment area(s): Complex, Dexterity, Mobility
Transport mode(s): Unspecified
Journey stage: Unspecified
Region: England - West Midlands

Document summary

Based on research carried out with a group of adults with Cerebral Palsy in Birmingham, UK, we consider the complex inter-relationship between the accessibility of the urban environment for those with impaired gross motor skills, and the ability of these people to lead full and independent lives. Drawing on a framework that considers mobility as movement, meaning-making and political, we demonstrate the reality of differentiated mobility. For those with bodies that function outside the presumed operating parameters of the model subjects of urban design, mobility may be possible, but is often uncomfortable and even dangerous, with significant associated effects for impaired people’s autonomy. Our study details social and structural, or design, barriers to people’s mobility, demonstrating the inter-connection between individuals’ behaviour and urban design in a manner that questions a clear distinction between the two. We draw upon the notions of emotional work and a commoning approach to mobility in suggesting that further investment in urban accessibility is squarely an issue of social justice.

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