A 2023 SPE Outstanding Book Award Winner
Autism―a concept that barely existed 75 years ago―currently feeds multiple, multi-billion-dollar-a-year, global industries.
In The Autism Industrial Complex: How Branding, Marketing, and Capital Investment Turned Autism into Big Business, Alicia A. Broderick analyzes how we got from the 11 children first identified by Leo Kanner in 1943 as “autistic” to the billion-dollar autism industries that are booming today. Broderick argues that, within the Autism Industrial Complex (AIC), almost anyone can capitalize on―and profit from―autism, and she also shows us how. The AIC has not always been there: it was built, conjured, created, manufactured, produced, not out of thin air, but out of ideologies, rhetorics, branding, business plans, policy lobbying, media saturation, capital investment, and the bodies of autistic people. Broderick excavates the 75-year-long history of the concept of autism, and shows us how the AIC―and indeed, autism today―can only be understood within capitalism itself. The Autism Industrial Complex is essential reading for a wide variety of audiences, from autistic activists, to professionals in the autism industries, to educators, to parents, to graduate students in public policy, (special) education, psychology, economics, and rhetoric.
Watch the book presentation “Raising Awareness of the AIC” hosted by NJACE and featuring the author, Alicia Broderick at: https://youtu.be/-fxzfuvuek4?t=336
Listen to Anne Borden King interview the author on The NoncompliantPodcast:
https://noncompliantpodcast.com/2022/06/30/is-there-an-autism-industrial-complex-interview-with-prof…
Perfect for courses such as: Introduction to Critical Autism Studies; Disability Studies–Theory, Policy, Practice; Disability & Rhetoric; Disability & Cultural Studies; Doctoral Seminar in Disability Studies; Cultural Foundations of Disability in Education
Lauren –
The information in this book is so incredibly important and immediately needs to be considered required reading for anyone attached to the “helping professions” that support autistic people (e.g. teachers, speech therapists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, pediatricians, etc.), parents of autistic people and also autistic people themselves. Alicia Broderick lays out the history of autism “intervention” and the development of what has become an industrial complex.I’m going to try to explain the AIC in two paragraphs:Autism is diagnosed and defined by media/pediatricians/therapists/educators/pharmaceutical companies/etc. as a disability, a problem, a set of symptoms to be eradicated, providing little to no hope of a “normal” future for children who receive the diagnosis. Intervention services, specifically applied behavior analysis (ABA) services- are offered by those who claim those services to be “scientifically proven” – but only if given in doses of 20-40 hours a week. Intense political lobbying efforts result in these services being named “medically necessary” and therefore required for insurance to fund them.What you have now is a foundation laid for profit-extraction with financial incentives for stakeholders to drum up business by finding more and more autistic “bodies” (as Broderick would call them) for which to prescribe more services. That gets done through fear-mongering media campaigns, “awareness” initiatives, pushes for “early intervention” and public admonitions to “know the signs of autism.” The widespread fear/awareness serves to justify what would otherwise be considered excessive and invasive “treatments” for any human being.This is a capital investment opportunity which makes autistic people the commodity.Autism “intervention” is a multi-billion dollar industry. The AIC creates both the demand and supply for services.The identities/interests/opinions of actual autistic people are completely left out of the equation.Again- anyone operating within the “helping professions”- anyone believing they are acting in service of autistic people need to be made aware of the AIC and how they’re operating within it.Alicia Broderick is a brilliant scholar who is operating on a wavelength that I don’t even think I can dream of aspiring to in my lifetime. That said- her writing rides up there on that wavelength. This is not a beach read- it’s an academic-language discussion of Ideas peppered with many many many citations to other academic-language Papers. I learned quite a few new vocabulary words, although I wasn’t able to get into enough research to arrive at a precise definition of “Foucauldian” which came up quite a few times. And while I admire her brilliance, I fear that her incredibly important message will remain buried in academic discourse when it needs to be proclaimed from rooftops and simplified on social media for consumption by the unacademic masses of which I’m a part. Us- the very cogs in the AIC machine.We need a bombshell Netflix documentary. A smart, biting podcast expose, perhaps?Until then, I’ll be returning to my regularly scheduled activities of screaming into my echo chamber… and adjusting my practices as a speech-language pathologist to support, rather than suppress, my fellow humans of all neurotypes.*Robin Roscigno, a co-author of several chapters of this book, has a TED talk about the Autism Industrial Complex (AIC) which everyone should watch.https://www.tedxmilehigh.com/autism-industrial-complex/*Alicia Broderick did a 2-hour presentation about the AIC for the New Jersey Autism Center of Excellence- also something everyone should watch. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-fxzfuvuek4
Iris –
“The Autism Industrial Complex” by Alicia A. Broderick is a must-read if you’re at all interested in the question of how to improve healthcare services for autistic people.Broderick breaks down step by step exactly how and why we have arrived at the current state of affairs in the United States regarding healthcare providers’ (and the general public’s) understanding of autism.If we want to explore what can be done to help improve health outcomes for autistic folks, we need a good understanding of WHY things currently are the way they are. Broderick’s book gives lots of keen insight on the topic that I think can spark a lot of productive discussion within the autistic self advocacy community as to what the most effective strategies might be to create real positive change.And, if you’re a healthcare provider reading this who has no idea what any of this is about, I encourage you to read this book, because it explores a public health issue that is currently affecting many of your patients.
V –
This is not the book I want to give parents of a newly dxed kid and I’m hoping we’re getting further away from ABA being everything (it’s not), but the information is so important. This is a very academic book, and it is very important for people to be able to push back on ABA and seeing it in context from this angle is important…. who is going to write the more accessible version I can hand to parents when they are entirely confused by my antipathy to ABA and it’s offshoots (rebrands – the friendlier and gentle versions).
matrixcube –
Great reads, very informative
Aileen P –
Essential reading for anyone with an interest in autism
This really helped me to understand how society’s view of autism and autistic people has been shaped by those with an interest in generating a profit and furthering their own interests at the expense of autistic people, and why there is so much misunderstanding and stigma about autism. The language is quite academic so it’s not an easy read but very worthwhile sticking with it. The book is very well researched, as you would expect from a Professor of Disability Studies, and I found the extensive references very useful. A very important book.