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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/25912
Title: An Anti-Colonial Examination of How Disability is Conceptualized, Responded to and Experienced by Prisoners within the Federal Prison System of Canada
Authors: Shamkhi, Fatemah
Advisor: Joseph, Ameil
Department: Social Work
Keywords: disability;race;anti-colonial;prison;incarceration
Publication Date: 2020
Abstract: This research examines how disability is conceptualized, responded to and experienced by prisoners within the federal prison system of canada , by attending to the constructs of disability and criminality as they relate to racial and colonial hierarchies. Drawing on anti-colonial theory and the concept of subalternity, this research aims to resist essentializing identity in a way that would limit ‘disability’ or ‘race’ to a particular spatial/temporal context. The constructs of race and disability will be attended to simultaneously, while engaging with how these identity categories have been co-constructed in relation to ‘criminality’, for the furthering of colonialism. Accordingly, this research contextualizes the mass-incarceration of racialized/disabled individuals within a broader, historic, colonial project of confinement and removal. I draw on 4 in-depth semi-structured interviews conducted for this study, with individuals who are living with disabilities and have been incarcerated in canadian federal prisons. Throughout this thesis, I couple my analysis of the ‘problem’ in question with attention to ‘how’ the problem is often discussed in dominant critical research and discourse, particularly attending to eurocentric articulations of race, disability and incarceration.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/25912
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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