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Political intersectionality and disability activism: understanding approaches to unity and difference

Political intersectionality and disability activism: understanding approaches to unity and difference
Political intersectionality and disability activism: understanding approaches to unity and difference
Social movement scholars have increasingly examined how political intersectionality helps reveal and explain whose issues and interests are marginalised or privileged within particular activist spaces and discourses. Hitherto, much of the intersectional analysis into social movements has interrogated questions of sameness, difference and power in relation to feminist, anti-racist and queer organising; this article builds upon our knowledge of social movements and intersectionality by exploring the perceptions and experiences of disability activists in the UK. The research draws upon 24 semi-structured interviews undertaken with disability rights activists, finding that a traditional emphasis on unity means that those who are multiply marginalised still experience a silencing of issues and interests of importance to them; moreover, while there is a recognition of difference, this is principally understood in relation to impairment or social class. Simultaneously, the research finds evidence of an increasing tendency amongst disability activists in the UK to engage with intersectionality, both in how they understand disability but also in terms of how they organise.
0003-1224
986-1004
Evans, Elizabeth
f1b57f4f-f30d-4cec-bec0-eeddb228afd9
Evans, Elizabeth
f1b57f4f-f30d-4cec-bec0-eeddb228afd9

Evans, Elizabeth (2022) Political intersectionality and disability activism: understanding approaches to unity and difference. The Sociological Review, 70 (5), 986-1004. (doi:10.1177/00380261221111231).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Social movement scholars have increasingly examined how political intersectionality helps reveal and explain whose issues and interests are marginalised or privileged within particular activist spaces and discourses. Hitherto, much of the intersectional analysis into social movements has interrogated questions of sameness, difference and power in relation to feminist, anti-racist and queer organising; this article builds upon our knowledge of social movements and intersectionality by exploring the perceptions and experiences of disability activists in the UK. The research draws upon 24 semi-structured interviews undertaken with disability rights activists, finding that a traditional emphasis on unity means that those who are multiply marginalised still experience a silencing of issues and interests of importance to them; moreover, while there is a recognition of difference, this is principally understood in relation to impairment or social class. Simultaneously, the research finds evidence of an increasing tendency amongst disability activists in the UK to engage with intersectionality, both in how they understand disability but also in terms of how they organise.

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2022 Sociological Review - Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 14 July 2022
Published date: September 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487664
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487664
ISSN: 0003-1224
PURE UUID: e3813feb-5384-4961-8f6f-47bc97518636
ORCID for Elizabeth Evans: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3237-8951

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Date deposited: 29 Feb 2024 18:16
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Author: Elizabeth Evans ORCID iD

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