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Say What You Mean: Rethinking Disability Language in Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly
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2014
Year
Physical ActivityResearch ParticipantsAdapted Physical ActivityDisability TerminologyDisabilityEducationKinesiologyInclusive EducationPhysical ExerciseDisability StudyRehabilitation EngineeringHealth SciencesPhysical FitnessRehabilitationRehabilitation ProcessDisability AwarenessPhysical TherapyDisability LanguageSpecial EducationOccupational TherapyTheoretical InconsistencyHuman Movement
Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly (APAQ) currently mandates that authors use person-first language in their publications. In this viewpoint article, we argue that although this policy is well intentioned, it betrays a very particular cultural and disciplinary approach to disability: one that is inappropriate given the international and multidisciplinary mandate of the journal. Further, we contend that APAQ's current language policy may serve to delimit the range of high-quality articles submitted and to encourage both theoretical inconsistency and the erasure of the ways in which research participants self-identify. The article begins with narrative accounts of each of our negotiations with disability terminology in adapted physical activity research and practice. We then provide historical and theoretical contexts for person-first language, as well as various other widely circulated alternative English-language disability terminology. We close with four suggested revisions to APAQ's language policy.