Issues of sexuality and relationships

Nathan J. Wilson, Patsie Frawley, Dilana Schaafsma, Amie O'Shea, Callista K. Kahonde, Vanessa Thompson, Judith McKenzie, David Charnock

Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperChapter

Abstract

Sexuality in the lives of people with intellectual disability is almost always conflated with sexual abuse, sexual behaviours, sexual knowledge and questions about capacity to "be" sexual. Rarely is sexuality discussed in a more holistic way that acknowledges pleasure, desire, identity and "self-authored" sexual expression. Writers like Michael Gill (2015) suggested this is due to sexual ableism which he defined as "the system of imbuing sexuality with determinations of qualification to be sexual based on criteria of ability, intellect, morality, physicality, appearance "¦" (p. 3). Through this lens, sexuality in the lives of people with intellectual disability is mediated by ideas about capacity and competence, assumptions of desirability and overshadowed by a discourse of risk and vulnerability. Foley (2017) reported that underpinning this discourse is a "paternalistic regime" whereby the sexual lives of people with intellectual disability are strongly surveilled, often by parents or other caregivers. He described this regime as being played out where people with intellectual disability, despite their chronological adulthood, "either must ask permission and/or are prevented by their parents from taking control over their social/sexual lives" (p. 6).
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationHandbook of Intellectual Disabilities: Integrating Theory, Research and Practice
EditorsJohnny L. Matson
Place of PublicationSwitzerland
PublisherSpringer
Pages989-1010
Number of pages22
ISBN (Electronic)9783030208431
ISBN (Print)9783030208424
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Keywords

  • sex
  • developmentally disabled
  • people with mental disabilities

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