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Collection: Documents - Catalog Card
| EXCERPT: Over the past 25 years, I have visited more than 500 institutions in the field of health, welfare, education, and delinquency, and at various times I have had institutional assignments, so that I became well acquainted with them from the inside, but it was not until a few years ago when I first saw some new institutions for the mentally retarded in the Scandinavian countries, and in particular Lillemosegaard (which we all shall visit on Wednesday morning) that I was suddenly struck with the tremendous contribution architects can make in our field. When I have chosen as the title of my few remarks this morning "Architecture's Mission in the Field of Mental Retardation," I have done so to indicate that I include architects among the professional groups that can make a primary contribution to the field of mental retardation.... |
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| TITLE: |
Architecture's Mission In The Field Of Mental Retardation |
| CREATOR: |
Gunnar Dybwad (author) |
| DATE: |
April 1966 |
| FORMAT: |
Speech |
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| SOURCE: |
Friends of the Samuel Gridley Howe Library and the Dybwad Family |
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| KEYWORDS: |
Access, Advocacy, Architecture, Cognitive Disability, Copenhagen, Denmark, Government, Gunnar Dybwad, Housing, Human Rights, Institutions, International Working Conference On Architectural Planning In Mental Retardation, Lillemosegaard, Mental Retardation, Normalization, Norway, Sweden |
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| NOTE: |
Delivered at the International Working Conference on Architectural Planning in Mental Retardation, Copenhagen. |
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