Niklas Altermark
Associate professor
The ideology of neuroscience and intellectual disability: reconstituting the 'disordered' brain
Author
Summary, in English
During the last two or three decades, neuroscience has changed how we understand brain functioning. This shift, which is re-conceptualizing the relationship between the materiality of the brain and consciousness, is bound to have implications for intellectual disability, which is commonly seen as a condition of the brain. At present, examinations of intellectual disability that deploy techniques and concepts from neuroscience constitute a growing research field that has been welcomed in some quarters of the disability research community. The purpose of this article is to urge for caution as regards this development. I argue that the neuroscience of intellectual disability is embodying ideological propositions that need to be problematized. By theorizing the relationship between biology and politics and examining neuroscientific publications on intellectual disability, I argue that this strand of research is underpinned by a discursive division between normal and pathological, that it therefore constitutes a continuation of understanding intellectual disability as a 'disorder' and that any firm separation between the 'nature' of intellectual disability and processes of power is inherently problematic. To be able to critically approach the neuroscience of intellectual disability, it is vital that disability researchers problematize the relationship between biology and politics.
Department/s
- Department of Political Science
Publishing year
2014
Language
English
Pages
1460-1472
Publication/Series
Disability & Society
Volume
29
Issue
9
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Routledge
Topic
- Political Science
Keywords
- bio-politics
- intellectual disability
- neuroscience
- disability studies
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0968-7599