Disability in a Turbulent Era
Edward Elgar Publishing
Will be published approx. on 28. August 2026
Book
Hardback
284 pages
978-1-0353-4724-7 (ISBN)
Description
This book highlights the generative tension arising when disability is approached from a range of critical perspectives. It explores the persistent and tightening grasp of ableism driven by growing uncertainty, instability and inequality.
Contributors propose novel approaches for affirming disability, challenging ableism and advancing justice against the increasing normalisation of fascist rhetoric. Drawing from a variety of under-valued epistemologies and ontologies, they outline methodologies from the Global South, decolonial lenses and original intersections. The book highlights a broad spectrum of contexts, including workplace discrimination, housing, the othering of those with energy limiting conditions and the precarity imposed on people who rely on medical technologies. Disability in a Turbulent Era also makes space for hope, advocating for the active disruption of assumptions about who can do what, and who cannot.
Presenting powerful critique and practical solutions, this book is an essential resource for scholars and students of disability studies, sociology, psychology and development. Disability educators, activists and care workers will also benefit from its actionable recommendations.
Contributors propose novel approaches for affirming disability, challenging ableism and advancing justice against the increasing normalisation of fascist rhetoric. Drawing from a variety of under-valued epistemologies and ontologies, they outline methodologies from the Global South, decolonial lenses and original intersections. The book highlights a broad spectrum of contexts, including workplace discrimination, housing, the othering of those with energy limiting conditions and the precarity imposed on people who rely on medical technologies. Disability in a Turbulent Era also makes space for hope, advocating for the active disruption of assumptions about who can do what, and who cannot.
Presenting powerful critique and practical solutions, this book is an essential resource for scholars and students of disability studies, sociology, psychology and development. Disability educators, activists and care workers will also benefit from its actionable recommendations.
Reviews / Votes
'In an age of intensifying global crises and reactionary politics, disability justice stands at a precipice. This timely volume traces how such turbulence is unevenly borne across disabled and neurodiverse people, and those who support them, urging collective resistance to challenge the ableist and austere conditions shaping the world today.' -- Andrew Power, University of Southampton, UK 'This edited volume provides challenging and stimulating topics that are necessary in our times. Crip wisdom is at the heart of each chapter, with stories and experiences from a wide range of contexts, the book provides new perspectives on what it means to be disabled, queer, neurodiverse, Indigenous, and human in times that are begging for change.' -- Kathryn Underwood, Toronto Metropolitan University, CanadaMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-0353-4724-7 (9781035347247)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Edited by Katherine Runswick-Cole, Chair in Education, School of Education,University of Sheffield, UK, Patty Douglas, Associate Professor of Disability Studies, Faculty of Education, Queen's University, Canada and Harriet Cameron, Senior Lecturer in Psychology and Education, School of Education, University of Sheffield, UK