scholarly journals Exposing the protected: Ghana’s disability laws and the rights of disabled people

2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 663-668 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Ocran
2021 ◽  
pp. 096466392110227
Author(s):  
Claire Spivakovsky ◽  
Linda Roslyn Steele

Disabled people are subject to disability laws – such as guardianship, mental health and mental capacity legislation – which only apply to them, and which enable legal violence on the basis of disability (‘disability-specific lawful violence’). While public health laws during the COVID-19 pandemic enabled coercive interventions in the general population, disabled people have additionally been subject to the continued, and at times intensified, operation of disability laws and their lawful violence. In this article we engage with scholarship on law, temporality and disability to explore the amplification of disability-specific lawful violence during the pandemic. We show how this amplification has been made possible through the folding of longstanding assumptions about disabled people – as at risk of police contact; as vulnerable, unhealthy and contaminating – into the immediate crisis of the pandemic; ignoring structural drivers of oppression, and responsibilising disabled people for their circumstances and the violence they experience.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sangyeon Yoon ◽  
Seungah Ryu ◽  
Shinhwa Suh ◽  
Yonghun Kim

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