Question

"Race, Poverty and Disability: Three Strikes and You"re Out! Or Are You?" Pamela Black, Fabricio Balcazar and Christopher Keys
Black, Balcazar and Keys chronicle the theoretical development to understanding race, class and disability. They argue that early conceptualizations present images of race, class and disability in terms of deficiency and dependence. For example, biological models represented certain racial and ethnic groups as genetically inferior. The eugenics movement that started in the early 1900s stemmed from the biological mode was used to establish race and class distinctions as "natural." Similarly, cultural models represented racial and ethnic groups as trapped in a cycle of poverty. This culture of poverty was reproduced from generation to generation. The authors state that biological and cultural models to explain race, class and disability do not adequately explain the differences between disabled and non-disabled, minority and non-minority populations.
The minority group model supplied a contrary position to the biological and cultural models by suggesting that social problems should be addressed structurally through the elimination of unequal power relations and re-distribution of wealth and income. However, identity formation is problematic within the minority group model because its focus is typically on a single issue, for example, race or gender or sexual orientation. According to the authors, this single issue strategy excludes those facing multiple concerns or "triple jeopardy." The authors advocate for the use of an empowerment framework so that "individuals from marginalized groups with multiple stigmas may gain the social, political, and economic support needed to overcome barriers to their full participation in society."
In the early 1900s, eugenics:
a. was the primary ideological framework in which policies and practices were developed to manage marginalized populations and was used to establish race and class distinctions as "natural."
b. made this a more democratic nation.
c. addressed social problems structurally by eliminating unequal power relations.
d. prevented the sterilization of people said to be "inferior."

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