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  6. Disability and Citizenship in Post-Soviet Ukraine: An Anthropological Critique

Disability and Citizenship in Post-Soviet Ukraine: An Anthropological Critique

File(s)
Sarah_D__Phillips___Disability_and_Citizenship_in_Post_Soviet_Ukraine__An_Anthropological_Critique.pdf (217.18 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/76595
Collections
GLADNET Collection
Author
Phillips, Sarah D.
Abstract

[Excerpt] In this paper I examine Ukraine’s burgeoning disability rights movement through the lens of citizenship to illustrate the complex processes through which certain categories of people (here, persons with disabilities) are transforming themselves—and being transformed— into particular types of citizens in a changing welfare state. I take an institutional and relational approach to understanding “citizenship,” a tack that has recently been suggested by scholars such as Margaret Somers (1994, 1995) and Allison Carey (2003), to suggest approaches to understanding citizen-state relations that shed light on the complex intersections of agency, power, and personhood that post-socialist social justice struggles entail.

Date Issued
2005-09-29
Keywords
disability
•
disability rights
•
human rights
•
discrimination
•
public policy. Americans with Disabilities Act
•
ADA
Type
article

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