Sexuality education for disabled children and youth in Ontario, Canada: Addressing epistemic injustice through school‐based sexuality education

Author:

Davies Adam1ORCID,O'Leary Samantha2,Prioletta Jessica3,Shay Bronte4,Bryan Malissa5,Neustifter Orion4

Affiliation:

1. College of Arts University of Guelph Guelph Ontario Canada

2. University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario Canada

3. School of Education Bishop's University Sherbrooke Quebec Canada

4. Department of Family Relations and Applied Nutrition University of Guelph Guelph Ontario Canada

5. Department of Sociology & Anthropology University of Guelph Guelph Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractWhile conversations pertaining to school‐based sexuality education are becoming more prominent, the experiences of disabled children and youth are still under‐discussed in research. Despite disabled childhood studies emerging as a field of inquiry, there is still a lack of critical conversation pertaining to disabled students' sexuality education within their respective schooling. This article draws from Fricker's theory of epistemic injustice to describe some of the ethical questions that arise in the denial of disabled children and youth's access to sexuality education in school contexts. By engaging with relevant literature on sexuality education and disabled students in schooling, this article puts forward that the continual exclusion of disabled students from accessing school‐based sexuality education promotes a form of epistemic injustice and silencing of the voices, perspectives and experiences of disabled students.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference82 articles.

1. Re‐imagining inclusion through the lens of disabled childhoods;Balter A. S.;Social Inclusion,2023

2. Sexuality education in Canadian schools: An overview in 1994;Barrett M.;The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality,1994

3. Abolishing innocence

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