‘Disability Is an Art. It's an Ingenious Way to Live.’: Integrating Disability Justice Principles and Critical Feminisms in Social Work to Promote Inclusion and Anti-Ableism in Professional Praxis

Author:

Goulden Ami1ORCID,Kattari Shanna K.2ORCID,Slayter Elspeth M.3,Norris Sarah E.4

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Work, Memorial University, St. John's, NL, Canada

2. Department of Women's & Gender Studies, School of Social Work, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

3. School of Social Work, Salem State University, Salem, MA, USA

4. Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

Abstract

Disability communities engaged with social work recognize how critical feminist inquiry and disability justice principles often overlap to promote anti-ableist theorizing, research, practice, and education. Both the feminist scholarship and the disability justice movement center the voices and perspectives of those most excluded, reflecting the intersectional experiences of disability communities in social work. In this brief, we draw on significant events, such as the impact of climate change and criminal legal systems on disabled people, to map connections between critical feminisms, disability justice principles, and social work values. In re-imagining disability justice as a form of critical feminism, we highlight parallels in their guiding principles and explore how their multi-issue frameworks interrogate the same systems of power and oppression. Through this re-envisioning, we build upon the knowledge offered by intersectional disability communities that center interdependence as practices of survival and resistance. The authors suggest that social workers engaged with principles of disability justice and critical feminisms would do well to consider interdependence, collective care, and mutual aid as pathways toward inclusive and anti-ableist professional praxis.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Gender Studies

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