ABSTRACT

This is the first book to explore the interplay of disability, gender and violence over the life course from researcher, practitioner and survivor perspectives. It gives due weight to the accounts of disabled children and adults who have survived institutional or individual violence, evidencing barriers to recognition, disclosure and reporting.

Written by disabled and non-disabled women from around the world, Disability, Gender and Violence over the Life Course addresses the dearth of voices and experiences of disabled women and girls in empirical research, policy and practice on issues of violence, victimisation, protection, support and prevention. Divided into three parts – Childhood, Adulthood and Older Life – this collection offers diverse perspectives on the intersectionality of disability, age, ethnicity, sexuality and violence that have hitherto been absent.

This book will be an invaluable resource for students and practitioners of multiple fields of practice and academic studies, including health and social care, nursing, social work, childhood studies, gender studies, disability studies, safeguarding and child protection, equality and human rights, sociology and criminology.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

The context of the book

part I|52 pages

Childhood

chapter 2|20 pages

Disclosure of abuse by disabled children

An emergent international model of telling, listening and acting

part II|70 pages

Adulthood

chapter 4|17 pages

Creating safer spaces for the empowerment of self-identified disabled women

67Reflecting on a study from Iceland

chapter 6|19 pages

Negotiating violence in contexts of poverty in South Africa

An empirical study of disabled women’s stories

chapter 7|16 pages

Fear at home

Surviving a quiet black British sexual abuse

part III|40 pages

Older life

chapter 8|15 pages

Elder abuse, ageing and disability

137A critical discussion

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

Reflections of the editors