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Autism rights movement - History |  | Autism rights movement - History: Encyclopedia II - Autism rights movement - History |  |
Shortly after Autism Network International was founded in 1993, the world wide web began to emerge and autistic people started to make websites that expressed their views of autism. As time went on, more and more such websites started. Autistics.Org was founded in 1998 and started Internet campaigns in 2000.
Autism rights movement - Noteworthy events in the movement.
On December 20, 2004, Amy Harmon published an article in the New York Times titled "How about not curing us? Some autistics are pleading" wh ...
See also:Autism rights movement, Autism rights movement - The anti-cure perspective, Autism rights movement - People in the movement, Autism rights movement - Role of parents in the movement, Autism rights movement - Organized groups, Autism rights movement - Individuals, Autism rights movement - Numbers, Autism rights movement - History, Autism rights movement - Noteworthy events in the movement, Autism rights movement - Issues, Autism rights movement - Ethical challenges to autism treatment, Autism rights movement - Opposition to eliminating autism, Autism rights movement - Opposition to an alleged insulting view of autism, Autism rights movement - Adult issues, Autism rights movement - Misconceptions of autistic traits, Autism rights movement - Functioning labels, Autism rights movement - Status as a social minority group, Autism rights movement - Activist methods and activities, Autism rights movement - Activist campaigns, Autism rights movement - Speculation of autism in famous people, Autism rights movement - Controversy, Autism rights movement - Criticism, Autism rights movement - Responses from the movement, Autism rights movement - Ongoing debate, Autism rights movement - Criticism within the movement, Autism rights movement - Notes |  | | Autism rights movement, Autism rights movement - Activist campaigns, Autism rights movement - Activist methods and activities, Autism rights movement - Adult issues, Autism rights movement - Controversy, Autism rights movement - Criticism, Autism rights movement - Criticism within the movement, Autism rights movement - Ethical challenges to autism treatment, Autism rights movement - Functioning labels, Autism rights movement - History, Autism rights movement - Individuals, Autism rights movement - Issues, Autism rights movement - Misconceptions of autistic traits, Autism rights movement - Notes, Autism rights movement - Noteworthy events in the movement, Autism rights movement - Numbers, Autism rights movement - Ongoing debate, Autism rights movement - Opposition to an alleged insulting view of autism, Autism rights movement - Opposition to eliminating autism, Autism rights movement - Organized groups, Autism rights movement - People in the movement, Autism rights movement - Responses from the movement, Autism rights movement - Role of parents in the movement, Autism rights movement - Speculation of autism in famous people, Autism rights movement - Status as a social minority group, Autism rights movement - The anti-cure perspective, Specifically related to autism rights movement |  | |
|  |  | Autism rights movement: Encyclopedia II - Autism rights movement - History
Autism rights movement - History
Shortly after Autism Network International was founded in 1993, the world wide web began to emerge and autistic people started to make websites that expressed their views of autism. As time went on, more and more such websites started. Autistics.Org was founded in 1998 and started Internet campaigns in 2000.
Autism rights movement - Noteworthy events in the movement
- On December 20, 2004, Amy Harmon published an article in the New York Times titled "How about not curing us? Some autistics are pleading" which covered the anti-cure perspective. [19]
Other related archives2003, 2004, 2005, 9/11, Aaron Rosanoff, Adolf Hitler's T-4 Euthanasia Program, African American, Albert Einstein, Anti-psychiatry, Asperger's, Asperger's Syndrome, Asperger's syndrome, Aspies For Freedom, Autism Network International, Autism Society of America, Autistic Pride Day, Autistic community, Autistic culture, Bill Gates, British, Christopher Gillberg, Controversies in autism, DSM, Deaf culture, December 20, Disability rights movement, February 23, Frederick Douglass, Gifted, Heritability of autism, Institutional damage, Intelligence tests and autism, Internet, Isaac Newton, Jasmine O'Neill, Jim Sinclair, Judy Singer, Lenny Schafer, List of autism-related topics, List of autistic people, List of fictional characters on the autistic spectrum, MSNBC, Massachusetts, Michelle Dawson, MindFreedom International, Monty Python, NBC, Neurodivergent, Neurodiversity, New York Times, October 22, People speculated to have been autistic, Psychiatric survivors movement, Simon Baron-Cohen, Steven Spielberg, Supreme Court of Canada, Thomas Jefferson, USA, United Nations, University of Kentucky, Washington, D.C., abolitionist, activism, ad hominem, applied behavioral analysis, autism, autism epidemic, autism spectrum, autistic community, blindness, cancer, chemistry, controversies about functioning labels in the autism spectrum, deaf culture, deafness, disability, disease, e-mails, emotions, epidemic, ethical challenges to autism treatment, ethics, eugenics, expertise, fetuses, gay, genocide, genotype, high functioning, homosexuality, intelligence testing, lesbian, mass delusion, mass hysteria, mental institutions, mentally retarded, mercury, movement, natural selection, neurodiversity, neurotypical, neurotypicals, nineteenth-century, parodies, person-first terminology, phenotype, psychiatric hospitals, psychology, sense of humor, signing, status quo, stereotype, straw man, tautological, telephone, their culture, theory of other minds, websites, world wide web
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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