Bricout, John C.2019-09-252019-09-252010-07-1320081553-6947http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/174974"Social work practice and research are too often situated in an unexamined conceptualspace whose fundamental assumptions go unquestioned. The values undergirding humanrights and accessibility for persons with a disability may seem uncontroversial today—commonplace, if not universal. As is so often the case, however, easy virtue founders onthe particulars—the ramp by the loading dock, the assistive learning technology in thewrong language, the reliably late paratransit bus. Accommodations are seeminglyestranged from the principles upon which they are based. [...]"engWith permission of the license/copyright holdersocial workwork ethicshealth careEconomic ethicsCommunity ethicsLabour/professional ethicsMinority ethicsEditorial CommentArticle