Skip to main content
Article
Critical Pathways to Disability Decarceration: Reading Liat Ben-Moshe and Linda Steele
Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
  • Sheila Wildeman, Dalhousie University Schulich School of Law
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Keywords
  • Liat Ben Moshe,
  • Linda Steele,
  • Critical Disability Studies,
  • Anti-Carceral Studies,
  • Prison Abolitionism,
  • Rights-Based Litigation,
  • Solitary Confinement
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.

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International
Citation Information
Sheila Wildeman, "Critical Pathways to Disability Decarceration: Reading Liat Ben-Moshe and Linda Steele" (2023) 12:1 feminists@law 1.