Disabling Migration Controls Shared Learning, Solidarity, and Collective Resistance

When people are prevented from meeting their needs, the impact is disabling, whether in the immigration system or in the wider population. Drawing on many years of research and activism, this book argues that insights from the disabled people’s movement, particularly the original Social Model of Dis...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author Yeo, Rebecca
Format eBook
LanguageEnglish
Published Routledge 2025
Taylor & Francis
Edition1
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISBN1032422793
1032422823
9781032422824
9781032422794
9781003362067
1003362060
1040096832
9781040096833
1040096794
9781040096796
DOI10.4324/9781003362067

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Summary:When people are prevented from meeting their needs, the impact is disabling, whether in the immigration system or in the wider population. Drawing on many years of research and activism, this book argues that insights from the disabled people’s movement, particularly the original Social Model of Disability, can be usefully extended to focus resistance on the disabling restrictions imposed on people subject to asylum and immigration controls. While acknowledging the pain and discomfort of many impairments and of forced displacement, the book focuses on injustices that can be changed. It does not catalogue the hostility of the ‘hostile environment’. Nor does it promote inclusive asylum restrictions. An unjust system is not transformed by including disabled people. Policies designed to deprive people of essential needs and to stoke hatred among the wider population are core elements of the rise of fascism. In this context, bringing together movements for disability and migrant justice could help build urgently needed solidarity and resistance with which to develop a society based on equity and common humanity. Quotations and images are used to convey the messages and priorities of disabled people seeking asylum, ensuring that the book is both engaging and grounded in the insights of lived experience. This book will interest people seeking to improve social justice, including scholars of disability, migration, sociology and politics.
Bibliography:MODID-943f4d11b5b:Taylor & Francis
ISBN:1032422793
1032422823
9781032422824
9781032422794
9781003362067
1003362060
1040096832
9781040096833
1040096794
9781040096796
DOI:10.4324/9781003362067