Historically, interventions designed to impact the lives of disabled people were predicated upon deficits-based models of disability. This began to change with the introduction of World Health Organization (WHO) frameworks, particularly the International Classification of Function (ICF), that emphasized that disability could only be understood in the context of interactions among health, environmental factors, and personal factors and by examining the impact of such factors on a person’s activities and participation. The ICF identified personal factors as among the elements of a social-ecological model of disability but did not provide an extensive taxonomy of what constitutes such factors. The Positive Psychology of Personal Factors examines personal factors that come from the field of positive psychology and, as such, to begin to identify and build strengths-based approaches to promoting the full participation, dignity, and well-being of disabled people.
Contributions by: Erin E. Andrews, Kathleen R. Bogart, Brandon Boring, Brooke Bryson, Katherine Budge, Thomas Dirth, Sidai Dong, Dana S. Dunn, Michal Einav, Timothy R. Elliott, Elisa S. M. Fattoracci, Anjali J. Forber-Pratt, Hannah Fry, Devin Guthrie, Mikki Hebl, Joshua Hicks, Yunzhen (Judy) Huang, Joseph Maffly-Kipp, Alexandra Kriofske Mainella, Malka Margalit, Vani A. Mathur, Megan McSpedon, Michelle Nario-Redmond, Jeffrey Noel, Timothy Oxendahl, Kevin Rand, Kevin Randle, Tomer Schmidt-Barad, Mackenzie L. Shanahan, Elisabeth Silver, Susan Miller Smedema, Laurel Wade, Michael L. Wehmeyer