Disability Justice - Further Learning Resources

Disability Justice information for Assertive Engagement

The following resources have been recommended or shared by the AE community of providers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Multnomah County.


 

  • Black Disability Justice Syllabus by Sins Invalid provides a robust list of resources to “honor the legacies of Black disabled artists, thinkers, activists, and leaders and a tool for future work.”

  • "Let's Play Ableism Bingo!": A tool, reflections, and resource list from Fakequity guest blogger Carrie Griffin Basas: "Catching people, including yourself, in violations of this card should be an opening, not a closing or judgment. Truth be told, you could catch me in violations of this card at different moments. And I just might have spilled my single-origin hemp latte on the entitlement bingo card. Just because I have a disability does not mean that I do right by all people with disabilities all of the time, whatever my intent."

  • What You're Saying When You Say "I Don't Need a Mic": This piece shares perspectives from the Unitarian Universalist Association that are important within and outside of faith-specific settings. "Failing to use a microphone, in other words, is a form of exclusion. 'When I'm excluded,' our anonymous leader continues, 'I feel weary, frustrated, and invisible. It's as though I'm on the other side of a plate glass window from the room where almost everyone else is, and they don't even notice that I'm stuck outside of their conversation.'"

  • I'm Not Your Inspiration, Thank You Very Much - a humorous and heartfelt TED Talk from Stella Young, a comedian and journalist who explains why she believes "Disability doesn't make you exceptional, but questioning what you think you know about it does."
Last reviewed November 26, 2024