Listening to the Margins: Reflecting on Lessons Learned From a National Conference Focused on Establishing a Qualitative Research Platform for Childhood Disability and Race

Author:

Moola Fiona J.1ORCID,Ross Tim2,Amarshi Aliya3,Sium Aman4,Neville Alyssa R.5,Moothathamby Nivatha6,Dangerfield Beth7,Tynes-Powell Tamara8,Pathmalingam Tharanni4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Early Childhood Studies, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, USA

2. The Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, Department of Geography and Planning and The Rehabilitation Sciences Institute, The University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, USA

3. Ted Rogers School of Management, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, USA

4. The Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, Toronto, ON, USA

5. School of Rehabilitation Therapy, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, USA

6. Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, The University of Toronto; The Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital and The Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, USA

7. Flourish on Queen, Toronto, ON, USA

8. Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission, Sydney, NS, Canada

Abstract

The late Black feminist scholar, bell hooks, suggested that the margin can be a place of radical possibility, where marginalized people nourish their capacity for collective resistance. On the margin, it is possible to generate a counter-language. In this paper, we chronicle, describe and reflect upon how bell hooks' ideas inspired the creation of a national 2-day conference titled, ‘Listening to the Margins’. This conference was focused on understanding the intersectional experiences of childhood disability and race with a view to better supporting racialized disabled children, youth, and their families. This conference was needed because intersectional experiences of childhood disability and race have been silenced in childhood disability studies, critical race studies, and various other resistance-oriented systems of thought. Racialized children with disabilities and their families are often unsupported as they navigate Euro-centric healthcare systems. Reflecting on lessons learned from our conference, we suggest several strategies for advancing meaningful research programs with racialized disabled children. Strategies include centering the art of listening, amplifying the margin, engaging the arts to promote empathy, embracing psychosocial support in work on ableism and racism, developing clinical tools and practices that are grounded in lived patient experiences, and advancing decolonizing research that recognizes the role research has historically played in perpetuating colonial violence. In totality, this article unpacks how sitting on the margins, as bell hooks suggested, has allowed us to occupy a place of discomfort and creativity necessary to disrupt dominant discourses. In so doing, we have made space for the hidden narratives of racialized disabled children and their families.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada - Connection program

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Education

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