Authors
Claire Edwards, Gill Harold
Publication date
2014/8/1
Journal
Disability and Rehabilitation
Volume
36
Issue
16
Pages
1350-1359
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Purpose: Recent debates about the epistemological origins of Universal Design (UD) have questioned how far universalist design approaches can address the particularities and diversities of the human form through a series of standardised, technical responses. This article contributes to these debates by discussing an emergent architectural paradigm known as DeafSpace, which articulates a set of design principles originating from the d/Deaf community in the US. Method: Commentary. Results: DeafSpace has emerged as a design paradigm rooted in an expression of d/Deaf cultural identity based around sign language, rather than as a response designed to compensate for, or minimise, impairment. It distinguishes itself from UD by articulating a more user-centred design process, but its principles are arguably rooted in notions of d/Deaf identity based around consensus and homogeneity, with less attention paid …
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Scholar articles
C Edwards, G Harold - Disability and Rehabilitation, 2014