ABSTRACT

This fully revised and expanded second edition of the Routledge Handbook of Disability Studies takes a multidisciplinary approach to disability and provides an authoritative and up-to-date overview of the main issues in the field around the world today. Adopting an international perspective and arranged thematically, it surveys the state of the discipline, examining emerging and cutting-edge areas as well as core areas of contention.

Divided in five parts, this comprehensive handbook covers:

  • Different models and approaches to disability.
  • How key impairment groups have engaged with disability studies and the writings within the discipline.
  • Policy and legislation responses to disability studies and to disability activism.
  • Disability studies and its interaction with other disciplines, such as history, philosophy, sport, and science and technology studies.
  • Disability studies and different life experiences, examining how disability and disability studies intersects with ethnicity, sexuality, gender, childhood and ageing.

Containing 15 revised chapters and 12 new chapters from an international selection of leading scholars, this authoritative handbook is an invaluable reference for all academics, researchers, and more advanced students in disability studies and associated disciplines such as sociology, health studies and social work.

Chapter 6 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF under a Creative
Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license at https://tandfbis.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/rt-files/docs/Open+Access+Chapters/9781138365308_oachapter6.pdf.

part I|2 pages

Theorising disability

chapter 1|11 pages

Disability studies

3Into the multidisciplinary future

chapter 2|18 pages

Understanding the social model of disability

Past, present and future

chapter 3|13 pages

Critical disability studies

Rethinking the conventions for the age of postmodernity

chapter 4|10 pages

Minority model

From liberal to neoliberal futures of disability

chapter 6|17 pages

Disability and human rights

chapter 7|13 pages

Invalidating emotions in the non-disabled imaginary

Fear, pity and disgust

chapter 8|15 pages

Psycho-emotional disablism

The missing link?

chapter 10|16 pages

Agency, structure and emancipatory research

Researching disablement and impairment

part II|2 pages

Disablement, disablism and impairment effects

chapter 14|17 pages

Critical realism as the fourth ‘wave’

Deepening and broadening social perspectives on mental distress

chapter 15|13 pages

It’s about time!

Understanding the experience of speech impairment

chapter 16|16 pages

Blindness/sightedness

Disability studies and the defiance of di-vision

part III|2 pages

Social policy and disability: Health, personal assistance, employment and education

chapter 17|13 pages

Social suffering in the neoliberal age

Surplusisty and the partially disabled subject

chapter 18|15 pages

Disabled people and employment

A UK perspective

chapter 22|16 pages

Boundary maintenance

Exploring the intersections of disability and migration

part IV|2 pages

Disability studies and interdisciplinarity

chapter 24|11 pages

The metanarrative of disability

Social encounters, cultural representation and critical avoidance

chapter 26|15 pages

The psychology of disability

chapter 27|14 pages

Challenging the impairment/disability divide

Disability history and the social model of disability

chapter 29|15 pages

We have never been able-bodied

Thoughts on dis/ability and subjectivity from science and technology studies

part V|2 pages

Contextualising the disability experience

chapter 30|15 pages

Feminism and disability

A cartography of multiplicity

chapter 31|17 pages

Disability and sexuality

chapter 32|14 pages

Race/ethnicity and disability studies

Towards an explicitly intersectional approach 1

chapter 33|12 pages

Mothering and disability

From eugenics to newgenics

chapter 34|13 pages

Understanding disabled families

Replacing tales of burden and resilience with ties of interdependency

chapter 35|15 pages

‘I hope he dies before me’

Unravelling the debates about ageing and people with intellectual disability