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Identifying and Addressing the Social Issues Experienced by Individuals with IDD International Review of Research in Developmental Disabilities Series

Langue : Anglais

Directeurs de Collection : Hodapp Robert M., Fidler Deborah J.

Couverture de l’ouvrage Identifying and Addressing the Social Issues Experienced by Individuals with IDD

Identifying and Addressing the Social Issues Experienced by Individuals with IDD, Volume 52 provides an ongoing scholarly look at research into the causes, effects, classification systems and syndromes, etc. of developmental disabilities. Updates to this new volume include chapters on Using large-scale databases to examine abuse and vulnerability in populations with ASD and other developmental disabilities, Peer relationships among children with ASD: Social acceptance, friendships and peer networks, Negative peer experiences in adolescents with ASD in the general education setting, Pathways to Inclusion and Belonging: Peer-Mediated Interventions for Students with Severe Disabilities, and Social Vulnerability in Williams Syndrome.

Contributors to this series come from wide-ranging perspectives, including genetics, psychology, education, and other health and behavioral sciences.

1. Using large-scale databases to examine abuse and vulnerability in populations with ASD and other developmental disabilities2. Peer relationships among children with ASD: Social acceptance, friendships and peer networks3. Negative peer experiences in adolescents with ASD in the general education setting4. Pathways to Inclusion and Belonging: Peer-Mediated Interventions for Students with Severe Disabilities5. Social Vulnerability in Williams Syndrome6. Achieving Justice in the Criminal Justice System as Victims or Defendants: Challenges Faced by People with Intellectual Disability7. Sexuality and ID

Academic researchers in developmental and cognitive psychology, as well as neuropsychology.
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA
Dr. Deborah Fidler is a Professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies at Colorado State University. Her research expertise is in the area of early development in individuals with neurogenetic syndromes, with a particular focus on the behavioral phenotype in Down syndrome and its implications for intervention and educational practice.
  • Provides the most recent scholarly research in the study of developmental disabilities
  • Contains a vast range of perspectives, with many topics covered
  • Presents an excellent resource for academic researchers