Discrimination and Violence against Women with Disabilities in Africa: Introducing Innocent Asouzu’s Complementarity

Author:

Gwara Joyline1,Ekor Diana2,Attoe Aribiah David3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Zimbabwe

2. University of Pretorita

3. Wits University, University of the Witwatersrand

Abstract

AbstractTo the authors’ knowledge, not much has been said or done in African philosophical circles with regard to providing a theoretical framework from which the discrimination against African women with disabilities can be addressed. In this article, the authors show how such a framework can be grounded in Innocent Asouzu’s complementarism. Their contention, one grounded in this framework, is that this discrimination has its roots in an isolationist, elitist, and exclusivist mindset/metaphysics. The authors further argue that one way to overcome this problematic mindset is to replace it with one that views each individual human being as a missing link of reality, that is, a complementary philosophy. The hope is that with this replacement the gaze that subconsciously views women living with disability as a group that is distinguishable from other human beings will be summarily abandoned.

Publisher

The Pennsylvania State University Press

Subject

Philosophy

Reference39 articles.

1. “Introduction: Disability, Gender, and Society.”;Indian Journal of Gender Studies,2008

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