Developing an understanding of the literature relating to the moral development of people with intellectual disabilities |
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Authors: | Peter E. Langdon Isabel C.H. Clare Glynis H. Murphy |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Medicine, Health Policy and Practice, Faculty of Health, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, United Kingdom;2. Broadland Clinic. Hertfordshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, Norwich NR13 5EW, United Kingdom;3. Cambridge Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Group, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Douglas House, 18B Trumpington Road, Cambridge CB2 8AH, United Kingdom;4. Tizard Centre, University of Kent, Canterbury CT2 7LZ, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | Recent reviews of moral development theory (Gibbs, Basinger, Grime, & Snarey, 2007) demonstrate that revisionist theoretical perspectives have cross cultural validity, but moral development in relation to people with intellectual disabilities (IDs) has not been considered within this literature. A structured review of the published literature relating to children, adolescents and adults with IDs, and moral development was carried out. Twenty studies meeting the inclusion criteria were found. The review indicated that people with IDs may not progress through the developmental stages of moral reasoning as quickly as typically developing peers, or reach the more advanced stages. This difference from non-disabled peers tends to disappear if groups are matched on some measure of cognitive ability. However, the studies are fraught with methodological problems and there is a need for further research, given the theoretical developments within the area of moral development, including the evidence of a relationship between moral development and anti-social behaviour amongst typically developing children and adolescents. |
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Keywords: | Moral reasoning Moral development Intellectual disability Cognitive development Behaviour Learning disability Developmental disability Sociomoral reasoning Moral judgement |
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