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Journal Articles (Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation)
Items in this Collection
- 1Arts-based research; qualitative methods; disability; critical disability studies
- 1Disability Movements
- 1Disability justice; Mad studies; eugenics; caregiving
- 1Paralympic Movement
- 1Social Justice
- 1critical disability studies, interdisciplinarity, paradigms, research assumptions
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2020-01-01
Eales, Lindsay, Peers, Danielle
Care is a dirty word for many in our communities. “Care giving” has become a euphemism for often-indifferent, under-funded, labor that is done to our bodies to (barely) enable our continued survival. Care is a dirty word in many of our leftist-feminist communities. Care work is a classification...
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Engaging axiology: Enabling meaningful transdisciplinary collaboration in adapted physical activity
Download2018-01-01
In this article, I explore the concept of axiology in the context of adapted physical activity research and analyze its connection to the more commonly discussed paradigmatic assumptions of epistemology and ontology. Following methodo- logical scholars, I argue for an acknowledgment of the...
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2016-01-01
Eales, Lindsay, Peers, Danielle
Where is the moving body in our written bodies of work? How might we articulate truly unspeakable and deeply moving moments of understanding? In what ways can we reflect and honor the knowl- edge of those who do not use academic words, English words, or any words at all? How might art move us to...
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2014-01-01
Peers, Danielle, Spencer-Cavaliere, Nancy, Eales, Lindsay
Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly (APAQ) currently mandates that authors use person-first language in their publications. In this viewpoint article, we argue that although this policy is well intentioned, it betrays a very particular cultural and disciplinary approach to disability: one that is...
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Sport and social movements by and for disability and deaf communities: Important differences in self-determination, politicisation, and activism
Download2018-01-01
On the face of it, the Paralympic Movement seems to share much with global disability movements1 in relation to rights, inclusion, and social change. The guiding aspiration of the International Paralympic Committee (IPC), for example, reads: “Athletes and the Paralympic Games are at the heart of...