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Full-Text Articles in Law
How The Americans With Disabilities Act Of 1990 Continues To Fail The Deaf And Hard Of Hearing, Maria Nowak
How The Americans With Disabilities Act Of 1990 Continues To Fail The Deaf And Hard Of Hearing, Maria Nowak
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
How The Biological/Social Divide Limits Disability And Equality, Martha T. Mccluskey
How The Biological/Social Divide Limits Disability And Equality, Martha T. Mccluskey
Journal Articles
What is disability - a biological or social condition? In the conventional equality frameworks, the division between biology and social identity puts disability at the bottom of the formal equality hierarchy, but at the top of the substantive equality hierarchy. Compared with race and then gender, disability deserves the least protection against formal discrimination, on the theory that disadvantages are based on real and relevant functional differences more than on suspect social judgments. But turning to substantive equality, disability’s supposed greater biological basis justifies affirmative accommodation of difference, compared to the social differences of race, with gender in the middle …
Shape Stops Story, Elizabeth F. Emens
Shape Stops Story, Elizabeth F. Emens
Faculty Scholarship
Storytelling and resistance are powerful tools of both lawyering and individual identity, as I argue in this brief essay published in Narrative as part of a dialogue on disability, narrative, and law with Rosemarie Garland-Thompson and Ellen Barton. Garland-Thompson's work shows us the life-affirming potential of storytelling, its role in shaping disability identity, and its role in communicating that identity to the outside world. By contrast, Barton powerfully shows how those same life-affirming narratives can force a certain kind of storytelling, can create a mandate to tell one story and not another. In short, Barton reminds us of the need …