INTERSECTIONAL DISABILITY & DISABLED WOMEN

See also Alice Wong’s READINGS & RESOURCES ON DISABILITY

 

READING LIST: intersectional disability & disabled women

Version: September 2017

  • Academic resources: 300 entries
  • Third sector, government and UN reports: 30 entries

 

Compiled by Dieuwertje Dyi Huijg, University of Manchester

 

January 2017 I distributed the first version of the reading list, this is the second and last version. The reading list now holds 300 academic entries and, at the end of the list, 30 entries with publications from the Third Sector, Government and UN reports. It would have been good to have social movement/activist entries, but there are some really good resources out there and the field is only growing. Hopefully lists in other languages already exist or they will appear at some point, however this list is limited to publications in English. As such, in terms of choices:

I was not sufficiently satisfied with the balance of the last list regarding intersectional representation (in terms of both themes and researchers), so I took a bit more time than planned to seek out more. The imbalance of the list – which was weighing towards an overrepresentation of white feminist scholars (I have limited the amount of entries per scholar) – was not (only) a result of my search skills, but reflects the field; I reckon that the field is less diverse than this list. I have worked to diversify the list specifically with regards to (1) race, trans* issues, perspectives on geopolitics and colonialism, and entries from and about the global south and (2) publications outside the social sciences and humanities. However, I am situated in intersectionality studies (not disability studies) and in the social sciences, live in the UK, and have compiled the list with a political-academic agenda in mind (though do not agree with all entries); this marks my perspective and knowledge and, as such, the list.

The list began as a small project, but with now 300 entries it has reached its objective; in fact, I would say that such a long list is not particularly practical or accessible in terms of ‘flipping through’. The reason I decided to not organise the list further in themes or categories, for instance, was that I think it would defeat the purpose of bringing together readings from often separate fields of study. Searching for entries enabled me to stumble on many very interesting and important readings and I hope it does the same for you.

Feel free or even encouraged to download this, crosspost and (re)distribute this, upload this to your own site, use it for your syllabus, burn it if you don’t like it, and so forth. Don’t worry about asking me for consent, it is hereby enthusiastically given and no need to notify me.

I very much enjoyed compiling this list and I hope it will be useful to you.

Dieuwertje Dyi Huijg

London (UK), 08 September 2017

 

ACADEMIC RESOURCES

 

  1. Abu-Habib, Lina (Ed.). (1997). Gender and disability: Women’s experiences in the Middle East. London: Oxfam.

 

  1. Abu-Khalil, Jahda. (2015). Taking the world stage: disabled women at Beijing. In: Lina Abu-Habib (Ed.), Gender and disability: Women’s experiences in the Middle East (pp. 67-72). London: Oxfam.

 

  1. Addlakha, Renu. (2015). Gendered Constructions of Work and Disability in Contemporary India: Discursive and Empirical Perspectives. In: Asha Hans (Ed.), Disability, Gender and the Trajectories of Power. New Delhi: Sage. (Chapter 10)

 

  1. Ahmad, Farah, Shik, Angela, Vanza, Reena, Cheung, Angela M., George, Usha, & Stewart, Donna E. (2005). Voices of South Asian Women: Immigration and Mental Health. Women & Health, 40(4), 113-130. Link (open access)

 

  1. Al-Awabida, Najah Diab. (2016). The Disabled Woman in Syria. Al-Raida Journal, 4. Link (open access)

 

  1. Annamma, Subini Ancy, Connor, David, & Ferri, Beth. (2013). Dis/ability critical race studies (DisCrit): Theorizing at the intersections of race and dis/ability. Race Ethnicity and Education, 16(1), 1-31. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Annamma, Subini A. (2015). DisCrit: Disability Studies and Critical Race Theory in Education. Teachers College Press.

 

  1. Anyon, Yolanda. (2009). Sociological Theories of Learning Disabilities: Understanding Racial Disproportionality in Special Education. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, 19(1), 44-57. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Arenas Conejo, Míriam. (2011). Disabled women and transnational feminisms: shifting boundaries and frontiers. Disability & Society, 26(5), 597-609. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Atshan, Leila. (2015). Disability and gender at a cross-roads: a Palestinian perspective. In: Lina Abu-Habib (Ed.), Gender and disability: Women’s experiences in the Middle East (pp. 53-59). London: Oxfam.

 

  1. Artiles, Alfredo J. (2013). Untangling the Racialization of Disabilities. Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, 10(02), 329-347. Link (open access)

 

  1. Axtell, Sara. (1999). Disability and chronic illness identity: Interviews with lesbians and bisexual women and their partners. International Journal of Sexuality and Gender Studies, 4(1), 53-72. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Balderston, Susie, & Roebuck, Emma. (2010). Empowering people to tackle hate crime. Trans women and disabled people working together with victim services in North East England. Equality and Human Rights Commission. Link (open access)

 

  1. Banks, Joy, & Hughes, Michael S. (2013). Double consciousness: Postsecondary experiences of African American males with disabilities. The Journal of Negro Education, 82(4), 368-381. Link (open access)

 

  1. Banks, Martha E. (2015). Whiteness and Disability: Double Marginalization. Women & Therapy, 38(3-4), 220-231. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Barclay, Jenifer L. (2014). Mothering the “Useless”: Black Motherhood, Disability, and Slavery. Women, Gender, and Families of Color, 2(2), 115-140. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Baril, Alexandre. (2015). Needing to Acquire a Physical Impairment/Disability: (Re)Thinking the Connections between Trans and Disability Studies through Transability. Hypatia, 30(1), 30-48. Link (open access)

 

  1. Barile, Maria. (2013). Individual-systemic violence: Disabled women’s standpoint. Journal of international women’s studies, 4(1), 1-14. Link (open access)

 

  1. Barnartt, Sharon N, & Altman, Barbara M. (2013). Introduction: Disability and intersecting statuses. In: Sharon N Barnartt & Barbara M Altman (Eds), Disability and Intersecting Statuses (pp. 1-20). Bingley: Emerald.

 

  1. Barounis, Cynthia. (2013). Cripping Heterosexuality, Queering Able-Bodiedness: Murderball, Brokeback Mountain and the Contested Masculine Body. In: Davis J. Lennard (Ed.), The Disability Studies Reader (4th ed., pp. 381-397). Oxon: Routledge.

 

  1. Basas, Carrie Griffin. (2013). The New Boys: Women with Disabilities and the Legal Profession. Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice, 25(1), Art.2. Link (open access)

 

  1. Bashford, Alison. (2003). Imperial hygiene: a critical history of colonialism, nationalism and public health. Springer.

 

  1. Baxter, Carol. (1997). Race equality in health care and education. Ballière Tindall.

 

  1. Baynton, Douglas C. (2013). Disability and the justification of inequality in American history. In: Davis J. Lennard (Ed.), The Disability Studies Reader (4th ed., pp. 33-57). London: Routledge.

 

  1. Begum, Nasa. (1990). Burden of Gratitude: Women with disabilities receiving personal care. University of Warwick, Social Care Practice Centre.

 

  1. Begum, Nasa. (1992). Disabled women and the feminist agenda. Feminist Review(40), 70-84. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Begum, Nasa. (1995). Beyond Samosas and Reggae: A guide to developing services for black disabled people. King’s Fund Publishing.

 

  1. Begum, Nasa. (1996). General practitioners’ role in shaping disabled women’s lives. In: Colin Barnes & Geof Mercer (Eds.), Exploring the divide: Illness and disability (157-172): Disability Press Leeds Link (open access)

 

  1. Begum, Nasa. (1996). Doctor, doctor…: Disabled women’s experience of general practitioners’. In: Morris, Jenny. (Ed.) Encounters with strangers: feminism and disability (pp. 168-193). London: The Women’s Press

 

  1. Bell, Chris. (2006). Introducing White Disability Studies: A Modest Proposal. In: Davis J. Lennard (Ed.), The Disability Studies Reader (2nd ed., pp. 275-282). London: Routledge.

 

  1. Bell, Christopher M. (2011). Blackness and disability: Critical examinations and cultural interventions. (Vol. 21): LIT Verlag Münster.

 

  1. Berberi, Tammy, & Berberi, Viktor. (2013). A Place at the Table: On Being Human in the Beauty and the Beast In: Johnson Cheu (Ed.), Diversity in Disney films: Critical Essays on race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality and disability (pp. 195-207): McFarland.

 

  1. Bhui, Kamaldeep (Ed.). (2002). Racism and Mental Health: Prejudice and Suffering. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

 

  1. Björnsdóttir, Kristín, Stefánsdóttir, Ástríður, & Stefánsdóttir, Guðrún Valgerður. (2017). People with Intellectual Disabilities Negotiate Autonomy, Gender and Sexuality. Sexuality and Disability, 35(3), 295-311. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Blair, Irene V, Steiner, John F, Fairclough, Diane L, Hanratty, Rebecca, Price, David W, Hirsh, Holen K, Wright, Leslie A, Bronsert, Michael, Karimkhani, Elhum & Magid, David J. (2013). Clinicians’ implicit ethnic/racial bias and perceptions of care among black and Latino patients. The Annals of Family Medicine, 11(1), 43-52. Link (open access)

 

  1. Block, Pamela. (2002). Sexuality, parenthood, and cognitive disability in Brazil. Sexuality and Disability, 20(1), 7-28. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Block, Pamela, Kasnitz, Devva, Nishida, Akemi, & Pollard, Nick. (2015). Occupying Disability: Critical Approaches to Community, Justice, and Decolonizing Disability. Springer.

 

  1. Blum, Linda M. (2007). Mother-Blame in the Prozac Nation Raising Kids with Invisible Disabilities. Gender & Society, 21(2), 202-226. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Brace, Elizabeth. (2008). The Sexual Lives and Identities of Women with Learning Disabilities: Exploring the Significance of Social Norms and Institutional Practices (PhD Thesis), Newcastle University, Newcastle. Link (open access)

 

  1. Bradbury-Jones, Caroline, Breckenridge, Jenna P, Devaney, John, Duncan, Fiona, Kroll, Thilo, Lazenbatt, Anne, & Taylor, Julie. (2015). Priorities and strategies for improving disabled women’s access to maternity services when they are affected by domestic abuse: a multi-method study using concept maps. BMC pregnancy and childbirth, 15(1), 350. Link (open access)

 

  1. Breckenridge, Jenna P, Devaney, John, Fiona, Duncan, Kroll, Thilo, Lazenbatt, Anne, Taylor, Julie, & Bradbury-Jones, Caroline. (2017). Conducting Sensitive Research With Disabled Women Who Experience Domestic Abuse During Pregnancy: Lessons From a Qualitative Study. SAGE Research Methods Cases Part 2. Retrieved from http://methods.sagepub.com/case/sensitive-research-disabled-women-domestic-abuse-pregnancy-qualitative (closed access)

 

  1. Brown, Lydia. (2016). You don’t feel like such a freak anymore. Representing Disability, Madness and Trauma in Litchfield Penitentiary. In: April Kalogeropoulos Householder & Adrienne Trier-Bieniek (Eds), Feminist Perspectives on Orange Is the New Black: Thirteen Critical Essays (pp. 174-193): McFarland.

 

  1. Brown, Tony N. (2003). Critical race theory speaks to the sociology of mental health: Mental health problems produced by racial stratification. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 292-301. Link (open access)

 

  1. Browne, Susan E, Connors, Debra, & Stern, Nanci. (1985). With the power of each breath: A disabled women’s anthology. Pittsburgh: Cleis Press.

 

  1. Bumiller, Kristin. (2008). Quirky citizens: Autism, gender, and reimagining disability. Signs, 33(4), 967-991. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Burghardt, Madeline. (2013). Common frailty, constructed oppression: tensions and debates on the subject of vulnerability. Disability & Society, 28(4), 556-568. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Burr, J. (2002). Cultural stereotypes of women from South Asian communities: mental health care professionals’ explanations for patterns of suicide and depression. Social Science & Medicine, 55(5), 835-845. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Butler, Ruth. (1999). Double the trouble or twice the fun? Disabled bodies in the gay community. In: Ruth Butler & Hester Parr (Eds.), Mind and body spaces: Geographies of illness, impairment and disability (pp. 203-220). London: Routledge.

 

  1. Cameron, Elaine, Evers, Helen, Badger, Frances, & Atkin, Karl. (1989). Black old women, disability and health carers. In: Margot Jefferys (Ed.), Growing Old in the Twentieth Century, 230-248.

 

  1. Campbell, Fiona Kumari. (2008). Exploring internalized ableism using critical race theory. Disability & Society, 23(2), 151-162. Link (open access)

 

  1. Carlson, Licia. (2001). Cognitive ableism and disability studies: Feminist reflections on the history of mental retardation. Hypatia, 16(4), 124-146. Link (open access)

 

  1. Carlson, Licia. (2016). Feminist Approaches to Cognitive Disability. Philosophy Compass, 11(10), 541-553. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Carmen, Elaine (Hilberman). (1995). Inner-City Community Mental Health: The Interplay of Abuse and Race in Chronic Mentally Ill Women. In: Charles V Willie, Patricia Perri Rieker, Bernard M Kramer & Bertram S Brown (Eds.), Mental Health, Racism And Sexism (pp. 217-236): University of Pittsburgh Press.
  2. Carter, Angela M. (2015). Teaching with Trauma: Trigger Warnings, Feminism, and Disability Pedagogy. Disability Studies Quarterly, 35(2). Link (open access)

 

  1. Cermele, Jill A, Daniels, Sharon, & Anderson, Kristin L. (2001). Defining normal: Constructions of race and gender in the DSM-IV casebook. Feminism & Psychology, 11(2), 229-247. Link (open access)

 

  1. Chantler, Khatidja. (2003). South Asian women: Exploring systemic service inequalities around attempted suicide and self-harm. European Journal of Social Work, 6(1), 33-48. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Chataika, Tsitsi. (2012). Disability, development and postcolonialism. In: Dan Goodley, Bill Hughes & Lennard Davis (Eds), Disability and social theory: New developments and directions (pp. 252-272).

 

  1. Chataika, Tsitsi. (2017). Disabled Women, Urbanization and Sustainable Development in Africa. In: Anita Lacey (Ed), Women, Urbanization and Sustainability: Practices of Survival, Adaptation and Resistance (pp. 177-196). London: Palgrave Macmillan. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Chataika, Tsitsi (Ed). (forthcoming). The Routledge Handbook of Disability in Southern Africa: Routledge.

 

  1. Chakravarti, Upali. (2015). A Gendered Perspective of Disability Studies. In: Asha Hans (Ed.), Disability, Gender and the Trajectories of Power. New Delhi: Sage. (Chapter 1)

 

  1. Chapman, Chris, Carey, Allison C, & Ben-Moshe, Liat. (2014). Reconsidering confinement: interlocking locations and logics of incarceration. In: Liat Ben-Moshe, Ysanne Chapman & Alison C. Carey (Eds.), Disability incarcerated: Imprisonment and disability in the United States and Canada (pp. 3-24): Palgrave Macmillan.

 

  1. Chaudhry, Vandana. (2016). Living at the Edge. Disability, Gender, and Neoliberal Debtscapes of Microfinance in India. Affilia, 31(2), 177-191. Link (open access)

 

  1. Cheng, Ryu P. (2009). Sociological Theories of Disability, Gender, and Sexuality: A Review of the Literature. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, 19(1), 112-122. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Chib, Malini. (2015). I Feel Normal Inside. Outside, My Body Isn’t! In: Asha Hans (Ed.), Disability, Gender and the Trajectories of Power. New Delhi: Sage. (Chapter 4)

 

  1. Chouinard, Vera, & Teather, E. (1999). Disabled women’s explorations of ableist spaces. Routledge London.

 

  1. Clare, Eli. (2001). Stolen bodies, reclaimed bodies: Disability and queerness. Public Culture, 13(3), 359-365. Link (open access)

 

  1. Clare, Eli. (2013). Stones in my pockets, stones in my heart. In: Lennard Davis (Ed.), The Disability Studies Reader (4th ed., pp. 563-572). Oxon: Routledge.

 

  1. Clare, Eli. (2015). Exile and pride: Disability, queerness, and liberation. (2nd ed.). London: Duke University Press.

 

  1. Conejo, Míriam Arenas. (2013). At the intersection of feminist and disability rights movements. From equality in difference to human diversity claims. In: Sharon N Barnartt & Barbara M Altman (Eds), Disability and Intersecting Statuses (pp. 23-45). Bingley: Emerald.

 

  1. Cooper, Charlotte. (1997). Can a Fat Woman Call Herself Disabled? Disability & Society, 12(1), 31-42. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Cooper, Lisa A, Roter, Debra L, Carson, Kathryn A, Beach, Mary Catherine, Sabin, Janice A, Greenwald, Anthony G, & Inui, Thomas S. (2012). The associations of clinicians’ implicit attitudes about race with medical visit communication and patient ratings of interpersonal care. American journal of public health, 102(5), 979-987. Link (open access)

 

  1. Corbett, Jenny. (1994). A proud label: Exploring the relationship between disability politics and gay pride. Disability and Society, 9(3), 343-357. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Cramer, Elizabeth P, & Gilson, Stephen F. (1999). Queers and crips: Parallel identity development processes for persons with nonvisible disabilities and lesbian, gay, and bisexual persons. International Journal of Sexuality and Gender Studies, 4(1), 23-37. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Cramer, Elizabeth P, & Plummer, Sara-Beth. (2009). People of color with disabilities: Intersectionality as a framework for analyzing intimate partner violence in social, historical, and political contexts. Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma, 18(2), 162-181. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Daley, Andrea. (2010). Being recognized, accepted, and affirmed: Self-disclosure of lesbian/queer sexuality within psychiatric and mental health service settings. Social Work in Mental Health, 8(4), 336-355. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Davar, Bhargavi V. (2015). Legal Capacity And Civil Political Rights For People With Psychosocial Disabilities. In: Asha Hans (Ed.), Disability, Gender and the Trajectories of Power. New Delhi: Sage. (Chapter 11)

 

  1. Davis, Lennard J. (1995). Introduction: Disability, the Missing Term in the Race, Class, Gender Triad. Enforcing normalcy: Disability, deafness, and the body. (pp.1-22) Verso. Link (open access)

 

  1. Davis, Lennard. (2013). Introduction: Disability, Normality, and Power. In: Lennard Davis (Ed.), The Disability Studies Reader (4th ed., pp. 1-16). Oxon: Routledge.

 

  1. Davy, Zowie. (2013). Commentary on the construction of Gender Dysphoria at Classifying Sex: Debating DSM 5. Psychology of Women Section Review, 15(2), 63-67. Link (open access)

 

  1. Davy, Zowie. (2015). The DSM-5 and the politics of diagnosing transpeople. Archives of sexual behavior, 44(5), 1165-1176. Link (open access)

 

  1. Deegan, Mary Jo. (1981). Multiple minority groups: A case study of physically disabled women. Soc. & Soc. Welfare, 8, 274. Link (open access)

 

  1. Deegan, Mary Jo, & Brooks, Nancy A (Eds.). (1985). Women and disability: The double handicap: Transaction Publishers.

 

  1. Dossa, Parin. (2005). Racialized bodies, disabling worlds “they [service providers] always saw me as a client, not as a worker”. Social Science & Medicine, 60(11), 2527-2536. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Dossa, Parin. (2008). Creating alternative and demedicalized spaces: Testimonial narrative on disability, culture, and racialization. Journal of International Women’s Studies, 9(3), 79. Link (open access)

 

  1. Dossa, Parin. (2009). Racialized bodies, disabling worlds: Storied lives of immigrant Muslim women. University of Toronto Press.

 

  1. Dowse, Leanne, Frohmader, Carolyn, & Didi, Aminath. (2016). Violence Against Disabled Women in the Global South: Working Locally, Acting Globally. In: Shaun Grech & Karen Soldatic (Eds.), Disability in the Global South: The Critical Handbook (pp. 323-336). Cham: Springer. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Dunhamn, Jane, Harris, Jerome, Jarrett, Shancia, Moore, Leroy, Nishida, Akemi, Price, Margaret, Robinson, Britney, & Schalk, Sami. (2015). Developing and Reflecting on a Black Disability Studies Pedagogy: Work from the National Black Disability Coalition. Disability Studies Quarterly, 35(2). Link (open access)

 

  1. Elshout, Elly, Wilhelm, Dorothee, Fontaine, Carole R, Eiesland, Nancy L, Stiteler, Valerie C, McCollum, Adele B, & Wenig, Margaret Moers. (1994). Roundtable Discussion: Women with Disabilities a Challenge to Feminist Theology. Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion, 10(2), 99-134. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Erevelles, Nirmala. (2011). The color of violence: Reflecting on gender, race, and disability in wartime. In: Kim Q Hall (Ed.), Feminist Disability Studies (pp. 117-135). Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

 

  1. Erevelles, Nirmala. (2011). Disability and difference in global contexts: Enabling a transformative body politic. Springer.

 

  1. Erevelles, Nirmala. (2014). Crippin’ Jim Crow: Disability, Dis-Location, and the School-to-Prison Pipeline. Disability Incarcerated (pp. 81-99): Springer. Link (open access)

 

  1. Erevelles, Nirmala. (2016). “Becoming Disabled”: Towards the Political Anatomy of the Body. Disability, Human Rights and the Limits of Humanitarianism, 219. Link (open access)

 

  1. Erevelles, Nirmala, Kanga, Anne, & Middleton, Renee. (2006). How does it feel to be a problem? Race, disability, and exclusion in educational policy. In: Ellen A. Brantlinger (Ed.), Who benefits from special education (pp. 77-99). New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

 

  1. Erevelles, Nirmala, & Minear, Andrea. (2010). Unspeakable offenses: Untangling race and disability in discourses of intersectionality. Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 4(2), 127-145. Link (open access)

 

  1. Erevelles, Nirmala, & Mutua, Kagendo. (2005). ‘I am a woman now!’: Rewriting cartographies of girlhood from the critical standpoint of disability. In: Pamela J. Bettis & Natalie G. Adams (Eds.), Geographies of girlhood: Identities in-between (pp. 253-269): Routledge.

 

  1. Fahd, Nada, Marji, Maha, Mufti, Nirmin, Masri, Muzna, & Makaram, Amer. (2015). A Double Discrimination: Blind Girls Life-Chances. In: Lina Abu-Habib (Ed.), Gender and disability: Women’s experiences in the Middle East (pp. 46-52). London: Oxfam.

 

  1. Fawcett, Barbara. (2002). Convergence or divergence? Responding to the abuse of disabled women. The Journal of Adult Protection, 4(3), 24-33. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Fine, Michelle, & Asch, Adrienne. (1981). Disabled women: Sexism without the pedestal. Soc. & Soc. Welfare, 8, 233. Link (open access)

 

  1. Fine, Michelle, & Asch, Adrienne. (2009). Women with disabilities: Essays in psychology, culture, and politics. Temple University Press.

 

  1. Flaugh, Christian. (2010). Of Colonized Mind and Matter: The Dis/Abilities of Negritude in Aimé Césaire’s Cahier d’un retour au pays natal. Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 4(3), 291-308. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Francis, Leslie P, Silvers, Anita, & Badesch, Brittany. (2016). Reproductive Rights and Access to Reproductive Services for Women with Disabilities. American Medical Association Journal of Ethics, 18(4), 430-437. Link (open access)

 

  1. Frazee, Catherine, Gilmour, Joan, & Mykitiuk, Roxanne. (2011). Now You See Her, Now You Don’t: How Law Shapes Disabled Women’s Experience of Exposure, Surveillance, and Assessment in the Clinical Encounter In: Dianne Pothier & Richard Devlin (Eds.), Critical Disability Theory: Essays in Philosophy, Politics, Policy, and Law (pp. 223-247). Vancouver: UBC Press.

 

  1. Fritsch, Kelly, Heynen, Robert, Ross, Amy Nicole, & van der Meulen, Emily. (2016). Disability and sex work: developing affinities through decriminalization. Disability & society, 31(1), 84-99. Link (open access)

 

  1. Garland-Thomson, Rosemarie. (2002). Integrating disability, transforming feminist theory. NWSA journal, 14(3), 1-32. Link (open access)

 

  1. Garland‐Thomson, Rosemarie. (2005). Feminist disability studies. Signs, 30(2), 1557-1587. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Garland-Thomson, Rosemarie. (2011). Integrating Disability, Transforming Feminist Theory. In: Kim Q. Hall (Ed.), Feminist disability studies (pp. 13-47). Bloomington: Indiana University Press. [revised version of 2002 article]

 

  1. Ghai, Anita. (2002). Disabled Women: An Excluded Agenda of Indian Feminism. Hypatia, 17(3), 49-66. Link (open access)

 

  1. Ghai, Anita. (2003). (Dis)embodied form: Issues of disabled women. Har-Anand Publications.

 

  1. Gibbons, Hailee M. (2016). Compulsory Youthfulness: Intersections of Ableism and Ageism in “Successful Aging” Discourses. Review of Disability Studies: An International Journal, 12(2 & 3). Link (closed access)

 

  1. Gillespie-Sells, Kath, Hill, Mildrette, & Robbins, Bree. (1998). She Dances to Different Drums: research into disabled women’s sexuality. King’s Fund.

 

  1. Gilroy, John, & Donelly, Michelle. (2016). Australian indigenous people with disability: Ethics and standpoint theory. Disability in the Global South (pp. 545-566): Springer. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Goethals, Tina, Schauwer, Elisabeth de, & Hove, Geert van. (2015). Weaving intersectionality into disability studies research: inclusion, reflexivity and anti-essentialism. Journal for Diversity and Gender Studies, 2(1-2), 75-94. Link (open access)

 

  1. Goldberg, Cara. (2015). Is Intersectionality a Disabled Framework? Presenting PWIVID: In/Visibility and Variability as Intracategorical Interventions. Critical Disability Discourses/Discours critiques dans le champ du handicap, 7. Link (open access)

 

  1. Goodley, Dan. (2011). Intersections: Diverse Disability Studies. Disability studies: An interdisciplinary introduction. (pp.33-47). Sage. [Chapter 3]

 

  1. Gorman, Rachel, & Udegbe, Onyinyechukwu. (2010). Disabled Woman/Nation: Re-narrating the Erasure of (Neo) colonial Violence in Ondjaki’s Good Morning Comrades and Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions. Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 4(3), 309-326. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Grech, Shaun. (2015). Decolonising Eurocentric disability studies: why colonialism matters in the disability and global South debate. Social Identities, 21(1), 6-21. Link (open access)

 

  1. Grech, Shaun, & Soldatic, Karen. (2015). Disability and colonialism:(dis) encounters and anxious intersectionalities. Social Identities, 21(1), 1-5. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Grillo, Trina, & Wildman, Stephanie M. (1991). Obscuring the importance of race: The implication of making comparisons between racism and sexism (or other-isms). Duke Law Journal, 1991(2), 397-412. Link (open access)

 

  1. Gunaratnam, Yasmin. (1993). Checklist, Health & Race: A Starting Point for Managers on Improving Services for Black Populations. Kings Fund Centre.

 

  1. Gunaratnam, Yasmin. (1997). Breaking the silence: black and ethnic minority carers and service provision. Community Care: A Reader (pp. 114-123): Macmillan Education UK.

 

  1. Gunaratnam, Yasmin. (2007). Complexity and complicity in researching ethnicity and health. In: Jenny Douglas, Sarah Earle, Stephen Handsley, Cathy E Lloyd & Sue Spurr (Eds.), A Reader in Promoting Public Health: Challenge and Controversy (pp. 47-56). Milton Keynes: Sage.

 

  1. Gunaratnam, Yasmin. (2008). From competence to vulnerability: Care, ethics, and elders from racialized minorities. Mortality, 13(1), 24-41. Link (closed access)

 

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  1. Sleeter, Christine E, & Grant, Carl A. (2011). Race, class, gender and disability in current textbooks. In: Eugene F Provenzo Jr, Annis N Shaver & Manuel Bello (Eds.), The textbook as discourse: Sociocultural dimensions of American schoolbooks (pp. 183-215): Routledge.

 

  1. Smith, Diane L. (2008). Disability, gender and intimate partner violence: Relationships from the behavioral risk factor surveillance system. Sexuality and Disability, 26(1), 15-28. Link (open access)

 

  1. Smith, Laura, Foley, Pamela F, & Chaney, Michael P. (2008). Addressing classism, ableism, and heterosexism in counselor education. Journal of Counseling & Development, 86(3), 303-309. Link (open access)

 

  1. Smith, Phil. (2004). Whiteness, normal theory, and disability studies. Disability Studies Quarterly, 24(2). Link (open access)

 

  1. Snyder, Sharon, & Mitchell, David. (2010). Introduction: Ablenationalism and the geo-politics of disability. Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 4(2), 113-125. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Soldatic, Karen. (2015). Postcolonial reproductions: disability, indigeneity and the formation of the white masculine settler state of Australia. Social Identities, 21(1), 53-68. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Sommo, Anthony, & Chaskes, Jay. (2013). Intersectionality and the disability: Some conceptual and methodological challenges. In: Sharon N Barnartt & Barbara M Altman (Eds), Disability and Intersecting Statuses (pp. 47-59). Bingley: Emerald.

 

  1. Soorenian, Armineh. (2008). The Significance of Studying Disabled International Students’ Experiences in UK Universities. [Chapter 8]. Link (open access)

 

  1. Soorenian, Armineh. (2013). Disabled International Students in British Higher Education: Experiences and Expectations. Springer Science & Business Media.

 

  1. Stienstra, Deborah, & Nyerere, Leon. (2016). Race, Ethnicity and Disability: Charting Complex and Intersectional Terrains. In: Shaun Grech & Karen Soldatic (Eds.), Disability in the Global South: The Critical Handbook (pp. 255-268). Cham: Springer. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Stone, Sharon D. (1989). Marginal Women Unite! Organizing the DisAbled Women’s Network in Canada. Soc. & Soc. Welfare, 16, 127. Link (open access)

 

  1. Stuart, O.W. (1992). Race and disability: Just a double oppression? Disability, Handicap & Society, 7(2), 177-188. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Stubblefield, Anna. (2007). ‘Beyond the pale’: Tainted whiteness, cognitive disability, and eugenic sterilization. Hypatia, 22(2), 162-181. Link (open access)

 

  1. Taylor, Ashley. (2015). The discourse of pathology: Reproducing the able mind through bodies of color. Hypatia, 30(1), 181-198. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Thiara, Ravi K, Hague, Gill, & Mullender, Audrey. (2011). Losing out on both counts: disabled women and domestic violence. Disability & Society, 26(6), 757-771. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Thomas, Carol. (1999). Female forms: Experiencing and understanding disability. McGraw-Hill Education (UK).

 

  1. Thomas, Dawna M. (2014). A Cape Verdean Perspective on Disability: An Invisible Minority in New England. Women, Gender, and Families of Color, 2(2), 185-210. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Thompson, S Anthony, Bryson, Mary, & De Castell, Suzanne. (2001). Prospects for identity formation for lesbian, gay, or bisexual persons with developmental disabilities. International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 48(1), 53-65. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Titchkosky, Tanya, & Aubrecht, Katie. (2015). WHO’s MIND, whose future? Mental health projects as colonial logics. Social Identities, 21(1), 69-84. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Tosh, Jemma, & Carson, Krista. (2016). A Desire to be ‘Normal’? A Discursive and Intersectional Analysis of ‘Penetration Disorder’. Intersectionalities: A Global Journal of Social Work Analysis, Research, Polity, and Practice, 5(3), 151-172. Link (open access)

 

  1. Turmusani, Majid. (2001). Disabled women in Islam: middle eastern perspective. Journal of Religion, Disability & Health, 5(2-3), 73-85. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Turner, Castellano, B, & Kramer, Bernard M. (1995). Connections Between Racism and Mental Health. In: Charles V Willie, Patricia Perri Rieker, Bernard M Kramer & Bertram S Brown (Eds.), Mental Health, Racism And Sexism: University of Pittsburgh Press.

 

  1. Vaidya, Shubhangi. (2015). Developmental Disability and the Family: Autism Spectrum Disorder in Urban India. In: Asha Hans (Ed.), Disability, Gender and the Trajectories of Power. New Delhi: Sage. (Chapter 8)

 

  1. Vernon, Ayesha. (1999). The Dialectics of Multiple Identities and the Disabled People’s Movement. Disability & Society, 14(3), 385-398. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Warner, David F, & Brown, Tyson H. (2011). Understanding how race/ethnicity and gender define age-trajectories of disability: An intersectionality approach. Social Science & Medicine, 72(8), 1236-1248. Link (open access)

 

  1. Washington, Harriet A. (2006). Medical apartheid: The dark history of medical experimentation on Black Americans from colonial times to the present. Doubleday Books.

 

  1. Watermeyer, Brian, & Swartz, Leslie. (2008). Conceptualising the psycho‐emotional aspects of disability and impairment: The distortion of personal and psychic boundaries. Disability & Society, 23(6), 599-610. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Wendell, Susan. (2001). Unhealthy disabled: Treating chronic illnesses as disabilities. Hypatia, 16(4), 17-33. Link (open access)

 

  1. Wendell, Susan. (2006). Toward a Feminist Theory of Disability. In: Davis J. Lennard (Ed.), The Disability Studies Reader (2nd ed., pp. 243-256). London: Routledge.

 

  1. Whitney, Chelsea. (2006). Intersections in identity–identity development among queer women with disabilities. Sexuality and Disability, 24(1), 39-52. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Wilde, Alison. (2009). Disabling Femininity: The Captivation of an Isolated Audience? Critical Studies in Television, 4(2), 4-23. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Wilkerson, Abby Lynn. (2003). Disability, sex radicalism, and political agency. NWSA Journal, 14(3), 33-57. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Williams, David R, & Williams-Morris, Ruth. (2000). Racism and mental health: the African American experience. Ethnicity and health, 5(3-4), 243-268. Link (open access)

 

  1. Willie, Charles V (Ed.). (1995). Mental Health, Racism And Sexism: University of Pittsburgh Press.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THIRD SECTOR, GOVERNMENT & UN REPORTS AND PAPERS

 

 

 

  1. Aziz, Razia and Aqeelah Alam. (2000). Reach Out Training Pack: Personal Relationships, Sexuality and Needs of African and Asian Descent Learning Disabled Women, Family Planning Association

 

  1. Barrow, Steve, & Mallatratt, Mary. (1992). Survey of elderly and disabled members of Lancashire’s ethnic minority communities (Report no.1). Preston: Lancashire. Social Services Department. Link (closed access)

 

  1. Begum, Nasa. (1992). Something to be proud of: The lives of Asian disabled people and carers in Waltham Forest. Race Relations Unit and Disability Unit, London Borough of Waltham Forest.

 

  1. Begum, Nasa, Hill, Mildrette, & Stevens, Andy. (1994). Reflections: the views of black disabled people on their lives and community care. CCETSW London.

 

  1. Begum, Nasa. (2006). Doing it for themselves: participation and black and minority ethnic service users. Social Care Institute for Excellence and the Race Equality Unit. Link (open access)

 

  1. Centre for Reproductive Rights. (2002). Reproductive Rights and Women with Disabilities: A Human Rights Framework [Briefing Paper]. Centre for Reproductive Rights. Link (open access)

 

  1. Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR), Women Enabled International (WEI), & National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health (NLIRH). (2014). Submission to the Committee Against Torture, United States of America. Link (open access)

 

  1. Chataika, Tsitsi. (2013). Gender and Disability Mainstreaming. Training Manual. Disabled Women in Africa (DIWA). Link (open access)

 

  1. Frohmader, Carolyn, & Ortoleva, Stephanie. (2013). The Sexual and Reproductive Rights of Women and Girls with Disabilities. Women With Disabilities Australia (WWDA) & Women Enabled International (WEI): International Conference on Population and Develompent (ICPD) Conference Briefing Paper. Link (open access)

 

  1. Garland-Thomson, Rosemarie. (2001). Re-shaping, Re-thinking, Re-defining: Feminist Disability Studies. Barbara Waxman Fiduccia Papers on Women and Girls with Disabilities: Center for Women Policy Studies. Link (open access)

 

  1. (1991). Race and Disability. A Dialogue for Action Conference Report. Link (open access)

 

  1. McClain, Charlotte Vuyiswa. (2002). The triple oppression: Disability, race and gender. A bimonthly web-zine of international disability news and views. Retrieved on January, 25, 2007.

 

  1. Meekosha, Helen & Carolyn, Frohmader. (2010). Recognition, Respect and Rights: Disabled Women in a Globalised World (on behalf of Women With Disabilities Australia – WWDA). Paper presented at the 2010 Regional Conference on Women with Disabilities, Guangzhou, China. Link (open access)

 

  1. Ortoleva, Stephanie, & Lewis, Hope. (2012). Forgotten Sisters – A Report on Violence Against Women with Disabilities: An Overview of its Nature, Scope, Causes and Consequences Northeastern Public Law and Theory Faculty Research Papers Series No. 104-2012. Link (open access)
  2. Roberts, Keri, & Harris, Jennifer. (2002). Disabled people in refugee and asylum seeking communities. Bristol: Policy Press and Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Link (open access)

 

  1. Rousso, Harilyn. (2003). Education for All: a gender and disability perspective Paper commissioned for the EFA Global Monitoring Report 2003/4, The Leap to Equality: World Bank. Link (open access)

 

  1. Shah, Sonali, Balderston, Susan, & Woodin, Sarah. (2015). Access to support services and protection for disabled women who have experienced violence: results and recommendations. Brochure for service providers and policy makers. University of Glasgow, University of Leeds. Link (open access)

 

  1. Singh, Becca. (2005). Improving Support for Black Disabled People: lessons from community organisations on making change happen. Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Link (open access)

 

  1. Soorenian, Armineh, & Lisney, Eleanor. (2016). Submission on the rights of persons with disabilities for the CESCR Committee’s review of the United Kingdom: Sisters of Frida. Link (open access)

 

  1. United Nations. (1990). Report on the Seminar of Disabled Women. Vienna: Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs Division for the Advancement of Women (20-24 August 1990), United Nations. Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI). (2014). Comments on U.S. Department of Education Proposed Regulations On Sexual Violence and Assault on College Campuses. Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI). (2015). WEI’s International Submission to the ICCPR Article 6 on Right to Life and Women. Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI). (2015). Women Enabled International’s Comments to the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities’ Draft General Comment on Article 6: Women. Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI), & Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR). (2015). Submission to the United Nations Universal Periodic Review: United States of America. Second Cycle. Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI). (2016). Women Enabled International Submission to OHCHR: Protection of the Rights of the Child and 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI). (2016). Women Enabled International Submission to the CEDAW Committee: Comments on Draft Update to General Recommendation No. 19. Endorsed by: Advocacy for Women with Disabilities Initiative (AWWDI) (Nigeria); Association of Disabled Women, ONE.pl (Poland); CREA (India); Handicap International’s Making It Work Initiative on Gender and Disability (France); Legal Defence and Assistance Project (LEDAP) (Nigeria); National Union of Women with Disabilities of Uganda (NUWODU); Shanta Memorial Rehabilitation Centre (India); Sisters of Frida (United Kingdom); and Women with Disabilities India Network (WWDIN). Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI). (2016). Talking Points: Zika, Microcephaly, Women’s Rights, and Disability Rights. Link (open access); Link en Español (open access); Link em Português (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI), Advocacy for Women with Disability Initiative (AWWDI), Legal Defence and Assistance Project (LEDAP), & Inclusive Friends Association. (2016). NGO Submission to the CEDAW Committee Pre-Sessional Working Group for Nigeria. Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI), & Women with Disabilities India Network. (2016). Joint Submission to the United Nations Universal Periodic Review: India. Third Cycle. Link (open access)

 

  1. Women Enabled International (WEI), & Sisters of Frida (SOF). (2016). Joint Submission to the United Nations Universal Periodic Review: The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Third Cycle. Link (open access)