ABSTRACT

Disability studies scholars and activists have long criticized and critiqued so-termed ’charitable’ approaches to disability where the capitalization of individual disabled bodies to invoke pity are historically, socially, and politically circumscribed by paternalism. Disabled individuals have long advocated for civil and human rights in various locations throughout the globe, yet contemporary human rights discourses problematically co-opt disabled bodies as ’evidence’ of harms done under capitalism, war, and other forms of conflict, while humanitarian non-governmental organizations often use disabled bodies to generate resources for their humanitarian projects. It is the connection between civil rights and human rights, and this concomitant relationship between national and global, which foregrounds this groundbreaking book’s contention that disability studies productively challenge such human rights paradigms, which troublingly eschew disability rights in favor of exclusionary humanitarianism. It relocates disability from the margins to the center of academic and activist debates over the vexed relationship between human rights and humanitarianism. These considerations thus productively destabilize able-bodied assumptions that undergird definitions of personhood in civil rights and human rights by highlighting intersections between disability, race, gender ethnicity, and sexuality as a way to interrogate the possibilities (and limitations) of human rights as a politicized regime.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Protesting “The Hardest Hit”: Disability Activism and the Limits of Human Rights and Humanitarianism

chapter 2|18 pages

The New Humanitarianism

Neoliberalism, Poverty and the Creation of Disability

chapter 4|20 pages

Volunteering as Tribute

Disability, Globalization and The Hunger Games

chapter 6|18 pages

Disability in Humanitarian Emergencies in India

Towards an Inclusive Approach

chapter 7|18 pages

Monitoring Disability

The Question of the ‘Human' in Human Rights Projects

chapter 13|16 pages

“Becoming Disabled”

Towards the Political Anatomy of the Body