Abstract
This article considers the recent history and consequences of positioning people living with dementia in the realms of disability, disablism and disability rights. The geo-political focus is the United Kingdom and neighbouring resource-rich nations in the Global North.
The first section examines the growing trend of identifying ‘dementia’ with ‘disability’, a trend fuelled by the expansion of dementia-related activism and research.
The second section focuses on how researchers who have published in Disability & Society and other journals have applied the social model of disability to individuals living with dementia.
The third section discusses three conceptual challenges that lie ahead for those who choose to research and theorise the dementia/disability connection.
These challenges concern:
- theorising dementia as disability;
- understanding intersectionality in dementia contexts; and
- understanding ‘abuse’ in dementia contexts.
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