Voices from Vietnam: Experiences of children and youth with disabilities, and their families, from an Agent Orange affected rural region

Type Journal Article - Disability & Society
Title Voices from Vietnam: Experiences of children and youth with disabilities, and their families, from an Agent Orange affected rural region
Author(s)
Volume 28
Issue 7
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 955-969
URL http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09687599.2012.741516
Abstract
This study examines the experiences of young people with disabilities from ethnic minorities, and their families, in central Vietnam. The study is set in an area contaminated by Agent Orange during the Vietnam War. Data were gathered from interviews with youth with disabilities and interviews and focus groups with mothers who had children with disabilities. Respondents expressed confronting multiple barriers to inclusion, education, health and well-being similar to other persons with disabilities and their families from around the world. Participants sought broad-ranging human rights as they described experiencing stigmatization and marginalization from negative social reaction toward disabilities and by residing in a location known for dioxin contamination. The participants’ voices are not only important in informing program responses to support implementation of Vietnam’s new National Law on Persons with Disabilities, but also timely as the US government considers proposed legislation providing material support for Vietnamese nationals affected by Agent Orange.

Related studies

»