Auteurs
Amélie van Den Brink, Willem Elbers, Aisha Fofana Ibrahim
Publicatiedatum
2021/8/9
Tijdschrift
Disability & Society
Volume
36
Editie
7
Pagina's
1035-1052
Uitgever
Routledge
Beschrijving
The on-going struggles of disability movements worldwide have been examined from multiple perspectives. As of yet, however, research into this topic has largely overlooked experiences on the African continent. This article seeks to address this gap by presenting a case study of the disability movement in Sierra Leone, West Africa. The study finds that on the one hand the Sierra Leonean disability movement is fragmented (referring to the tendency of groups to work individually as opposed to operating in a collective manner), thus limiting synergy. Three main ‘centrifugal’ forces underlying fragmentation are identified: resource scarcity, impairment specific interests and capacity differences between impairment types. On the other hand, the movement somehow manages to survive and even achieve modest successes. The research shows that interdependence, shared experiences of marginalization, and a clear …
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