This commentary explores the sometimes uncomfortable ambivalence that colors most people's experience of disability, either as an aspect of a person's own identity, or as an aspect of a person's interactions with a person with a disability. Disabilities are experienced by many as both a positive and a negative aspect of a person's identity. The commentary describes the work of two disability scholars who have recently explored how this ambivalence affects both legal schemes and parenting decisions, and argue for a 'destigmatizing' of this ambivalence.
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