All Stories

  1. Black sickle cell patients’ lives matter: healthcare, long-term shielding and psychological distress during a racialised pandemic in England – a mixed-methods study
  2. Repercussions of overturning Roe v. Wade for women across systems and beyond borders
  3. “I want to become someone!” gender, reproduction and the moral career of motherhood for women with sickle cell disorders
  4. Let's Get Back to Normal? COVID-19 and the Logic of Cure
  5. An African Path to Disability Justice: Community, Relationships and Obligations
  6. "Let's get back to normal!" COVID-19 and the logic of cure
  7. On the possibility of a disabled life in capitalist ruins: Black workers with sickle cell disorder in England
  8. Who Gets Cured? COVID-19 and Developing a Critical Medical Sociology and Anthropology of Cure
  9. ‘They Can Replace You at Any Time!’: (In)Visible Hyper-Ableism, Employment and Sickle Cell Disorders in England
  10. Competing ethics in a pilot strategy to implement parasitology training and research in post-Ebola Sierra Leone
  11. Intersectionality and employment in the United Kingdom: Where are all the Black disabled people?
  12. “You have to find a caring man, like your father!” gendering sickle cell and refashioning women's moral boundaries in Sierra Leone
  13. Time to apply a social determinants of health lens to addressing sickle cell disorders in sub-Saharan Africa
  14. Biosocial Model of Disability
  15. Incidental Findings of Sickle Cell Trait From an Everyday Diabetes Test: Should General Health Care Providers and Testing Centers Report, Retest, or Refer?
  16. The Routledge Handbook of Disability Activism
  17. Disability Futures
  18. Introducing Disability Activism
  19. Rights to social determinants of flourishing? A paradigm for disability and public health research and policy
  20. Do disabled people need a stronger social model: a social model of human rights?
  21. Ethical (dis)enchantment, afflictive kinship, and Ebola exceptionalism
  22. Cash not care: the planned demolition of the UK welfare state
  23. Public health, research and rights: the perspectives of deliberation panels with politically and socially active disabled people
  24. Practices and discourses of ubuntu: Implications for an African model of disability?
  25. Practices and discourses of ubuntu: Implications for an African model of disability?
  26. Emancipatory Engagement and Co-Production: Disability Research for Activism
  27. Resignifying the sickle cell gene: Narratives of genetic risk, impairment and repair
  28. Implications for public health research of models and theories of disability: a scoping study and evidence synthesis
  29. SITES OF EXCEPTION. HIV Exceptionalism: Development through Disease in Sierra Leone. By Adia Benton. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015. Pp. xii + 176. $79, hardback (ISBN 9780816692422); $22.50, paperback (ISBN 9780816692439).
  30. The New Humanitarianism
  31. Neoliberal policy, chronic corruption and disablement: biosecurity, biosocial risks and the creation of ‘Ebola survivors’?
  32. War and Embodied Memory
  33. Disabled People in Conflicts and Wars
  34. Book Review of Disability Research Today: International Perspectives
  35. Radicalising Disability
  36. ‘Who's the guy in the room?’ Involving fathers in antenatal care screening for sickle cell disorders
  37. Fathers and Sickle Cell Screening
  38. Gun violence
  39. Native American communities on health and disability: borderland dialogues
  40. Mixed-Methods Approaches in a Post-Conflict Ethnographic Case Study with War-Wounded People
  41. Limitations of Individualistic Peacebuilding in Postwar Sierra Leone
  42. A Comparative Analysis: Everyday Experiences of Disability in Sierra Leone
  43. Paying for stories of impairment – parasitic or ethical? Reflections undertaking anthropological research in post-conflict Sierra Leone
  44. Review of Barron and Ncube, Poverty and Disability
  45. Emotion and Embodiment in Sierra Leone
  46. Coming to terms with inequality and exploitation in an African state: researching disability in Sierra Leone
  47. Book reviews
  48. Practices of responsibility and nurses during the euthanasia programs of Nazi Germany: A discussion paper
  49. Nursing, obedience, and complicity with eugenics: a contextual interpretation of nursing morality at the turn of the twentieth century
  50. The complexity of nurses' attitudes toward euthanasia: a review of the literature