Critical Pathways to Disability Decarceration: Reading Liat Ben-Moshe and Linda Steele

Authors

  • Sheila Wildeman

Abstract

I consider how Liat Ben-Moshe’s Decarcerating Disability and Linda Steele’s Disability, Criminal Justice and Law: Reconsidering Court Diversion contribute to emerging conversations between critical disability studies and anti-carceral studies, and between disability deinstitutionalization and prison abolitionism. I ask: what if any role might law, or specifically rights-based litigation, play in resisting carceral state strategies and redirecting material and conceptual resources toward supports for diverse forms of flourishing? I centre my remarks on the special relevance of Ben-Moshe’s and Steele’s books to social movement activism in Atlantic Canada and critical reappraisal of Canada’s solitary confinement litigation.

Author Biography

Sheila Wildeman

Associate Professor, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University, Canada.

Published

03-07-2023

How to Cite

Wildeman, S. (2023). Critical Pathways to Disability Decarceration: Reading Liat Ben-Moshe and Linda Steele. Feminists@law, 12(1). Retrieved from https://journals.kent.ac.uk/index.php/feministsatlaw/article/view/1185

Issue

Section

Decarcerating Disability, Criminal Justice and Law