TO
LOVE, TO HOLD AND HAVE IT TAKEN AWAY– THE PAIN OF
CHILDBIRTH
FOR PARENTS WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY
M.
Spencer
Intellectual
Disability Rights Service, Parents with ID Project , Australia
A growing number of
women and men with intellectual disability aspire
to be parents.
Research suggests that this aspiration is not unrealistic
- if provided with
the right support many adults with intellectual
disability can and
do parent well. It is also an aspiration respected in
the United Nations
Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities
(Article 23). However in reality it is an aspiration often
thwarted by the
entrenched pessimistic attitudes, a lack of services
and a trend towards
early removal in “child-at-risk” cases. The
following paper
discusses the findings of an Australian project to
enable justice for
parents with intellectual disability under surveillance
and investigation
by the Statutory Child Protection Agency. The paper
will focus on the
experience of parents with intellectual disability
whose babies were
removed at birth. It will highlight the long term
emotional, social
and economic costs of this practice. And lastly, make
recommendations
about strategies and programs necessary if people
with intellectual
disability are to exercise their rights and achieve their
aspiration – to
love, to hold and raise their children.
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