Description
“The Autism Matrix fills in crucial gaps, and will greatly improve how the context of diagnosis and treatment is understood…The original research represented here is wide-ranging and invaluable.”
Times Higher Education
“Gil Eyal and colleagues, five sociologists from Columbia University, have brought a fresh perspective from a different discipline to try to explain autism’s expansion in prevalence and popularity…Overall I found much to admire in this detailed study.”
British Medical Journal
“This is a very useful book for those interested in autism and the role of parent movements and activists, and more generally in the social factors affecting changes in the classification of diseases.”
Sociology of Health and Illness
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.