© The Society for the Social History of Medicine 2005, all rights reserved
The Origins and Early Developments of Special/Adaptive Wheelchair Seating

*Strathclyde Centre for Disability Research, Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Applied Social Sciences, University of Glasgow, Adam Smith Building, Bute Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RT, UK. E-mail: n.watson{at}socsci.gla.ac.uk
Science and Technology Studies Unit, Department of Sociology, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UK. E-mail: bw8{at}york.ac.uk
The design and use of wheelchairs significantly changed during the last half of the twentieth century, enabling greater mobility, independence, and social inclusion for the user. Among many innovations was the development of special or adaptive seating. Emerging in the last quarter of the century from a multifaceted and multidirectional movement, special or adaptive seating transformed wheelchairs from simple mobility tools into postural aids. They afforded the possibility for people with learning disabilities and/or severe physical impairments to leave the confines of institutional life and access the wider community. This article explores the social and technical processes involved in the rise and formation of this movement and resulting technology. We chart early developments in special seating and show how the wheelchair developed, both as a response to and as a catalyst of social change.
Keywords: learning difficulties; wheelchair; seating; innovation; de-institutionalization; history
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