Public Lecture ON THE MARGINS OF CITIZENSHIP: INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY AND CIVIL RIGHTS IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICA9/30/2009

THE CENTER ON HUMAN POLICY, LAW, AND DISABILITY STUDIES PRESENTS
ON THE MARGINS OF CITIZENSHIP: INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY AND CIVIL RIGHTS IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICA
A Public Lecture by Allison C. Carey
Thursday, October 22, 2009
4:00—5:30 pm
500 Hall of Languages
Allison Carey, who has been active in disability advocacy and politics her entire life, draws upon a broad range of historical and legal documents as well as the literature of citizenship studies to develop a “relational-practice” approach to the issues of intellectual disability and civil rights. She examines how and why parents, self-advocates, and professionals fought for different visions of rights for this population throughout the twentieth century and the changes that took place over that time.
Allison C. Carey is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Shippensburg University. Her book,
On the Margins of Citizenship, was published in August 2009 by Temple University Press.
This lecture is free and open to the public.
CART will be provided.
This lecture is also sponsored by
The Sociology Department,
The Beyond Compliance Coordinating Committee (BCCC),
Cultural Foundations of Education,
The School of Education and
The Taishoff Center for Inclusive Higher Education.
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