Nonetheless, this is a valuable book both for people who work in the mental health field and for people with psychiatric disabilities because it so clearly lays out the facts about disability oppression, which Charlton describes as a "human rights tragedy of epic proportions." By taking a global perspective, Charlton illustrates clearly that although the lives of people with disabilities in developed countries are difficult, those of people in the third world are almost unimaginably so. And yet, as his examples from countries as diverse as Zimbabwe, Thailand, Brazil, and others show, people with disabilities are everywhere organizing to demand the same basic things: freedom, self-determination, empowerment, and liberation.