Rg. Golledge, GEOGRAPHY AND THE DISABLED - A SURVEY WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO VISION IMPAIRED AND BLIND POPULATIONS, Transactions Institute of British Geographers, 18(1), 1993, pp. 63-85
Traditionally, geography has paid relatively little attention to disab
led or disadvantaged populations. As society has concerned itself more
with problems of dealing with the blind, the physically handicapped,
the retarded, the deaf, the socio-economically destitute and homeless,
and other special populations, the discipline of geography has dragge
d its feet in terms of examining how its expertise can be used to help
understand and solve the many problems these special populations enco
unter in normal commerce with physical and built environments. In this
paper I outline some general and some specific suggestions regarding
the way geographers can invoke their skills and knowledge to deal with
sets of problems faced by these special populations. The paper is des
igned to make suggestions both for instructional purposes (i.e., provi
ding a sufficiently wide topical coverage for potential course-work in
the area), and to identify specific future research challenges. The c
ombined effect is to suggest that geographical study of the disabled c
ould represent a new systematic area of geographic concentration that
would combine micro and macro approaches, and facilitate the developme
nt of new geographic theory, methods, and applications.