Intersectional Colonialities: Embodied Colonial Violence and Practices of Resistance at the Axis of Disability, Race, Indigeneity, Class, and Gender

Author:   Robel Afeworki Abay ,  Karen Soldatić
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032247748


Pages:   292
Publication Date:   28 May 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Intersectional Colonialities: Embodied Colonial Violence and Practices of Resistance at the Axis of Disability, Race, Indigeneity, Class, and Gender


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Author:   Robel Afeworki Abay ,  Karen Soldatić
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9781032247748


ISBN 10:   1032247746
Pages:   292
Publication Date:   28 May 2024
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

0.The relevance of analysing embodied violence and practices of resistance, contestation, and mobilisation at the axis of disability, race, indigeneity, class, and gender. 1.Decolonising disability studies: Conceptualising disability justice from an African community ideal. 2.Racialized and Gendered Ableism: The Epistemic Erasure and Epistemic Labour of Disability in Transnational Contexts. 3.Trans-Latinidades, disability and decoloniality: Diasporic and Global South LatDisCrit lessons from Central America. 4.Degeneracy & Replacement: Reproducing white settler anxieties in the 21st century. 5.Disabled Romani people in Germany: Learning from the notion of indigeneity in disability studies outside of Settler-Colonial states. 6.Africa and the epistemic normativity of disability. 7.Impossible working lives and disabled bodies during racialised capitalism: Perspectives from Germany and the UK. 8.Stigma as a structure of disablement: Towards collective postcolonial justice. 9.Coloniality, disability, and the family in Kurdistan-Iraq. 10.Raising children with autism in a patriarchal society of a new liberal state: Experiences of mothers of autistic children in Bangladesh. 11.Disability discourse and Muslim student organisations in Malang, Indonesia. 12.Migration studies and disability studies: Colonial engagements past, present and future. 13.Colonial and ableist constructions of ‘vulnerability’ shaping the lives of disabled asylum seekers and refugees in the UK and Germany. 14.Towards a decolonial approach to disability as knowledge and praxis: Unsettling the ‘colonial’ and re-imagining research as spaces of struggles. 15.Reflecting on the How Questions: Using intersectional methods for policy changes. 16.Cultural humility in participatory research: Debunking the myth of ‘hard-to-reach’ groups.

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Author Information

Robel Afeworki Abay is a sociologist and a guest professor of participatory approaches in social and health sciences at Alice Salomon University of Applied Sciences Berlin. Karen Soldatić is a Canadian excellence research chair, Health Equity and Community Wellbeing, Toronto Metropolitan University and Whitlam Fellow at Western Sydney University.

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