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Reminder: Join WPDHAC on July 22!
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Western Pennsylvania Disability History and Action Consortium

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Our website offers a collection of resources about disability rights history. 
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Join WPDHAC on July 22!

 

JULY 2020 NEWS

 

Wednesday, July 22, 4:30-6:00pm
Learning from our History: Living Beyond the Walls of the Institution


Join the Western Pennsylvania Disability History Consortium, Temple University Institute on Disabilities, and Pennhurst Memorial and Preservation Alliance for a facilitated virtual discussion of the obstacles to living beyond the walls of institutionalized settings, current issues in community-based services, and what the future might hold.

To pre-register for this event or to join the event in progress, visit the 
Disability Pride Virtual PA website. Captioning and ASL interpretation will be provided.
 
For information:
412-204-7199
info@wpdhac.org

Pennsylvania State symbol in bright green with a front facing strong fist in white with a circle surrounding it. Words in alternate colors of white and royal blue say Disability Pride Virtual PA, Celebrating 30th Anniversary of the ADA.

Before the discussion, view one or more of the videos that will help frame the discussion:

From Wrongs to Rights (2013 / 8 minutes) tells the story of early 1970s activism in Western Pennsylvania that exposed the use of cages at Polk institution and led to the firing of the superintendent. The activism created momentum for the de-institutionalization movement. 

i go home (2016 / 56 minutes) recounts the history of barring children with intellectual disability from public schools and advising parents to send them to institutions. A late-1960s Philadelphia television news expose' shed light on deplorable conditions inside the walls of Pennhurst institution and motivated the public to demand change. 

Valuing Lives: Wolf Wolfensberger and the Principle of Normalization (2015 / 57 min.) explores the principle of “normalization”—a revolutionary idea in human services in the 1970s that challenged long-held assumptions about people with intellectual and developmental disabilities and became the framework for human services. The historic shift in thinking was made popular by iconoclastic professor Wolf Wolfensberger. (Password for video: wolfdoc)

This event is offered in conjunction with Disability Pride Virtual PA, a 30-day statewide celebration of the Americans with Disabilities Act, and ADA30 Pittsburgh and Allegheny County.

Have you taken our survey?

SURVEY

If you haven't taken our survey yet, please do. The Consortium serves as a clearinghouse for records and artifacts that tell the story of disability rights history and activism in Western Pennsylvania. 

If you know of such items or information, we'd like to add them to the listings on our website. If you need help preserving them, we can help with that too. 

Contact us at info@wpdhac.org.
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