Cultural Model of Disability
An extension of disability models that accounts for the multitude of cultural meanings embedded in disability across different societies and communities. The cultural model recognizes that disability is not experienced uniformly across cultures—different cultural contexts produce different understandings of what disability means, how it should be addressed, and what constitutes access. This model is particularly relevant for global accessibility work, where Western-centric assumptions about disability and technology may not apply in other cultural contexts.
Category: disability studies · models of disability
Related: Social Model of Disability · Political/Relational Model of Disability