ABSTRACT

This comprehensive ground-breaking southern African-centred collection spans the breadth of disability research and practice. Reputable and emerging scholars, together with disability advocates adopt a critical and interdisciplinary stance to prove, challenge and shift commonly held social understanding of disability in traditional discourses, frontiers and practices in prominent areas such as inter/national development, disability studies, education, culture, health, religion, gender, sports, tourism, ICT, theatre, media , housing and legislation.

 

This handbook provides a body of interdisciplinary analyses suitable for the development of disability studies in southern Africa. Through drawing upon and introducing resources from several disciplines, theoretical perspectives and personal narratives from disability activists, it reflects on disability and sustainable development in southern Africa. It also addresses a clear need to bring together interdisciplinary perspectives and narratives on disability and sustainable development in ways that do not undermine disability politics advanced by disabled people across the world. The handbook further acknowledges and builds upon the huge body of literature that understands the social, cultural, educational, psychological, economic, historical and political facets of the exclusion of disabled people.

 

The handbook covers the following broad themes:

• Disability inclusion, ICT and sustainable development

• Access to education, from early childhood development up to higher education

• Disability, employment, entrepreneurship and community-based rehabilitation

• Religion, gender and parenthood

• Tourism, sports and accessibility

• Compelling narratives from disability activists on societal attitudes toward disability, media advocacy, accessible housing and social exclusion.

Thus, this much-awaited handbook provides students, academics, practitioners, development partners, policy makers and activists with an authoritative framework for critical thinking and debates that inform policy and practice in incomparable ways, with the view to promoting inclusive and sustainable development.

part I|81 pages

Disability inclusion and sustainable development

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Critical connections and gaps in disability and development

chapter 2|14 pages

Leave no one behind

Disability mainstreaming in action

chapter 4|14 pages

Theatre for development

Bringing disabled students’ hidden transcripts out of the closet

chapter 5|14 pages

Building sustainable communities

Why inclusion matters in the post-conflict environment

part III|32 pages

Inclusion in higher education

chapter 11|14 pages

When rights are discretionary

Policy and practice of support provision for disabled students in southern Africa

part V|53 pages

Religion, gender and parenthood

chapter 16|13 pages

The ‘unholy trinity’ against disabled people in Zimbabwe

Religion, culture and the Bible

chapter 17|12 pages

Addressing disability and gender in education development

Global policies, local strategies

chapter 19|14 pages

Disability, intimacy and parenthood

Deconstructing ‘mutually exclusive’ constructs

part VI|40 pages

Tourism, sports and accessibility

chapter 20|13 pages

Disability and tourism in southern africa

A policy analysis

chapter 22|13 pages

Mobile outreach seating clinics

Improving access to wheelchair and support services

part VII|47 pages

Narratives from disability activists

chapter 23|10 pages

A citizen of two worlds

chapter 25|3 pages

Disability advocacy in action

Why I built an accessible house in Zimbabwe

chapter 27|6 pages

‘For I know the plans that I have for you’

The story of my life