Publication Date
1-1-2001
Document Type
Article
Organizational Units
Sturm College of Law
Keywords
Disability, Stigma, Client Identity, Civil Litigation
Abstract
This article explores the idea that questions of client identity are central to many disability rights cases, and that the legal system, operating on the client through the medium of her own lawyer, may require the client to re-define herself in a way that involves significant intrusion into the client's personal autonomy. In the article, I take the position that the pressures on a disability rights plaintiff to re-define herself in a manner consistent with the stereotypical expectations of the legislature, judges and juries often are further exacerbated by the imbalance of power inherent in the attorney-client relationship. This imbalance may make it more difficult for the client to portray herself as a strong and capable individual, thus creating another layer of oppression for a client who may be seeking, through the process of litigating her claim, to tell her story in her own voice.
Publication Statement
Copyright held by the authors. User is responsible for all copyright compliance.
Originally published as The Right to Be Heard: The Obligation of State Courts to Pay for Interpreters for Deaf Litigants, 2 CORNELL J. LAW & PUB. POLICY 205 (1992).
Recommended Citation
Perpetuating Stigma: Client Identity in Disability Rights Litigation, 2 UTAH L. REV. 247 (2001).