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Book Review: Career Success of Disabled High-flyers

Posted: 02 September 2005 | Subscribe Online


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The title of this should really be Career Success of Physically Disabled High-flyers. In it, Sonali Shah examines the factors that have influenced 31 physically disabled people who have achieved success, either politically, financially, artistically or academically, writes Simon Heng.

Reporting their personal experiences, views and reflections, this is primarily aimed at inspiring disabled people who want to become high-flyers.

By examining subjective factors like ambition (determination, response to disability and personal definitions of success) alongside objective measures (educational achievement, social status and financial success), Shah provides a useful framework for us to look at how all disabled people can be integrated into mainstream society.
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Many of the stories are about struggles with adversity, either with disability or institutional discrimination, but my overall impression was of people who had confidence in their abilities, who had set themselves high but realistic targets, and had worked hard to achieve them.

Instructive for anyone who works with disabled people in education, employment and society in general, this book is a thorough piece of social research. Although this makes for heavy reading, the book is both thought-provoking and inspirational.

Simon Heng is physically disabled, works on service user issues and writes for Community Care



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