Orientating disability studies to disablist austerity: applying Fraser’s insights
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Dodd, Steven (Author)
Title
Orientating disability studies to disablist austerity: applying Fraser’s insights
Abstract
Many disabled people in Britain have experienced profound challenges brought about by a government policy programme characterised by ‘austerity’. Drawing on the work of Fraser and Polanyi, this article explores new ways in which disability studies can become theoretically orientated to the task of explaining and challenging what has become an issue of overbearing importance for many disabled people. It is argued that Fraser’s notion of bivalency encapsulates the combination of cultural and economic challenges which characterise ‘disablist austerity’. Fraser’s development of Polanyi’s work is used to argue that disability studies should be orientated to large-scale economic challenges as well as cultural and discursive concerns that are more often the object of study in the field.
Publication
Disability & Society
Volume
31
Issue
2
Pages
149-165
Date
February 2016
Journal Abbr
Disability & Society
Language
English
ISSN
09687599
Short Title
Orientating disability studies to disablist austerity
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Dodd, Steven. 2016. “Orientating Disability Studies to Disablist Austerity: Applying Fraser’s Insights.” Disability & Society 31 (2): 149–65. DOI: 10.1080/09687599.2016.1152952.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- austerity
- budget
- conceptual structures (information theory)
- culture
- disability studies
- disablism
- government policy
- Great Britain
- marketisation
- people with disabilities - psychology
- practical politics
- public welfare
- recognition
- redistribution
- research methodology
- social justice
- socioeconomic factors
- triple movement
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