The (in)equality issues facing disabled people are extensive and long-enduring. The way(s) in which equality is conceptualised has important consequences for understandings of disability. The ambiguity of what I call dis-equality theory is two-fold; the apparent failure of mainstream equality theorising in, firstly, embracing disability concepts at all, and secondly, in fully incorporating the logistics of disability, particularly in relation to the social construction of such. Practices of institutional and more complex forms of discrimination are part of those deeper structures of domination and oppression which maintain disabled people in positions of disadvantage. Everyday practices, in the ‘ordinary order of things’ (Bourdieu, 2000), c...
This thesis explores the right to access employment for persons with disabilities under the UN Conve...
Joseph Fishkin’s new book, Bottlenecks, reinvigorates the concept of equal opportunity by simultaneo...
The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities marks a shift in international legal r...
The (in)equality issues facing disabled people are extensive and long-enduring. The way(s) in which ...
This thesis is an evaluation of the badness of disability and equality. It argues that disability po...
While eschewing an explicit definition, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with ...
While many important advances have been made to address injustice in the context of disability – suc...
There are two main accounts of disability that have provided different un-derstandings of what being...
With the recent development of disability studies, a great deal of effort has been made on the analy...
Responding to the absence of an international treaty expressly protecting people with disabilities, ...
This article attempts to trace how the infuriatingly elusive concept of equality has been applied in...
If race and gender remain the most valuable currency of identity, Martha McCluskey’s Article interve...
Disabled people are half as likely to go to university, half as likely to get qualifications, and ha...
AbstractThis article seeks to chronicle the political history and intellectual antecedence of disabi...
The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) is a modern human rights treaty wit...
This thesis explores the right to access employment for persons with disabilities under the UN Conve...
Joseph Fishkin’s new book, Bottlenecks, reinvigorates the concept of equal opportunity by simultaneo...
The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities marks a shift in international legal r...
The (in)equality issues facing disabled people are extensive and long-enduring. The way(s) in which ...
This thesis is an evaluation of the badness of disability and equality. It argues that disability po...
While eschewing an explicit definition, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with ...
While many important advances have been made to address injustice in the context of disability – suc...
There are two main accounts of disability that have provided different un-derstandings of what being...
With the recent development of disability studies, a great deal of effort has been made on the analy...
Responding to the absence of an international treaty expressly protecting people with disabilities, ...
This article attempts to trace how the infuriatingly elusive concept of equality has been applied in...
If race and gender remain the most valuable currency of identity, Martha McCluskey’s Article interve...
Disabled people are half as likely to go to university, half as likely to get qualifications, and ha...
AbstractThis article seeks to chronicle the political history and intellectual antecedence of disabi...
The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) is a modern human rights treaty wit...
This thesis explores the right to access employment for persons with disabilities under the UN Conve...
Joseph Fishkin’s new book, Bottlenecks, reinvigorates the concept of equal opportunity by simultaneo...
The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities marks a shift in international legal r...