CED a progressive Information Centre

CED Publications


Signs of The Times


Docpost

Selected clippings sent by Post :
  • Rights
  • Habitat
  • Disaster
  • Critical Concerns
  • CED Productions

  • Films
  • Backgrounders
  • Activists Say...
  • Development Digest
  • Posters
  • By & for NGOs

    Resources for NGOs
  • Announcements
  • Training Calender
  • Interesting websites
  • from CED friends
  • from the field
  • CED Newsletters

  • August 2007
  • CED and ...

  • RDC
  • Tradelinks
  • Besharp
  • Jan Vikas Andolan
  • KICS
  • IN FOCUS

    INVITATION FOR A TWO-DAY CONFERENCE on DISABILITY, GENDER AND SOCIETY: CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES AND CHALLENGES

    21-22 August 2008
    (0930-1700 HRS)
    Conference Centre,
    University of Delhi, (North Campus)
    Chhatra Marg
    New Delhi 110007

    The Centre for Women’s Development Studies (CWDS), New Delhi is organising a two-day conference on ‘Disability, Gender and Society: Contemporary Perspectives and Challenges’ in partnership with the Women’s Studies and Development Centre (WSDC) of Delhi University As you are aware disability is an emerging paradigm, and women’s studies has played a significant role in this development. The aim of this conference is to engage with the issue of disability from an academic inter-disciplinary and gender-sensitive perspective. It hopes to create a dialogue between different stakeholder, viz., academics, activists, students and policy-makers, in an ongoing effort to mainstream disability in the academy and wider society.

    A special issue of the ‘Indian Journal of Gender Studies’ entitled Disability, Gender and Society (guest edited by Renu Addlakha) will also be released during the conference.

    In view of your work/interest in research and advocacy on disability, we welcome your active participation.

    Please confirm your participation to Ms. Usha Wali at usha@cwds.ac.in

    Kindly also find attached the concept note and programme of the conference.

    Mary E. John Vibha Chaturvedi Renu Addlakha
    Director Director Senior Fellow/Conference Co-ordinator

    CWDS WSDC CWDS  


    CONCEPT NOTE

    Persons with disabilities are amongst the most disempowered groups. They are constantly faced with discrimination and are subjected to neglect, prejudice, revulsion, rejection and pity. They face economic, educational, architectural, legal and health barriers, which prevent them from leading a fulfilling life and achieving their full potential. Women with disabilities face violations of their rights at every level. They are considered a financial burden and social liability by their families; they are denied opportunities to movement outside the home and access to education; they are viewed as asexual, helpless and dependant; their vulnerability to physical, sexual and emotional abuse is enormous; their aspirations for marriage and parenthood often denied; they grow up ensconced within the walls of the home or special institutions isolated and neglected with no hope of a normal life.

    The rise of the disability movement in different parts of the world and the proactive role of the United Nations since the 1970s has moved the issue of disability from the realm of charity and welfare to that of rights and entitlements. In that spirit India passed the landmark ‘Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act in 1995 mandating a range of policy initiatives for persons with disabilities in the fields of health, accessibility education, employment and social security. In the light of this scenario, India’s signing of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities on 1st October 2007 is a significant event, the meaning and implications of which will unravel in the coming years.

    In the light of the above, the Centre for Women’s Development Studies (CWDS), New Delhi decided to jointly organise a two-day conference on gender, disability and society with the Women’s Studies and Development Centre (WSDC) of Delhi University. It may be noted that disability is a thrust research area of CWDS. In order to maximise student participation and to create an interface between the disability movement and the academy, it was decided to hold this event on campus. The conference seeks to engage with the concept of disability from a variety of disciplinary positions, socio-cultural contexts and subjective experiences. Each of the papers addresses disability within the overarching framework of the Indian reality, bringing a strong gender perspective. While in some papers gender is the principal focus (Bhargavi Davar, Amita Dhanda, Asha Hans and colleagues, Anita Ghai and Rachna Johri, Nandini Ghosh.Nilika Mehrotra and Shubhangi Vaidya), others engender their analysis in novel ways. For instance, Upali Chakravarti examines family caregiving and Michele Friedner maps transnational discursive flows through a gendered lens. Then, Shilpaa Anand deconstructs notions of disability in the colonial discourse and how they can be analysed from a gender perspective. In a more contemporary vein, Gajendranath Karna and Jagdish Chander engender their analysis of the disability movement and the discipline of disability studies in India respectively. Jeeja Ghosh and Vandana Chaudhry look at grass root empowerment modalities with a particular focus on women with disabilities.

    Disability is no longer confined to a limited number of physical, sensory, psychosocial and communicative limitations with negative social consequences. The disability paradigm has emerged as an analytical tool that can be used to analyse a range of biological and social conditions. Surabhi Tandon Mehrotra constructs the life histories of some female leprosy affected women showing the interface between personal experience, family dynamics, institutionalisation and ‘cure’ through a revolutionary multi-drug treatment regime that has made it possible to eliminate leprosy. From another perspective, Sabiha Hussain looks at the ongoing social suffering of a woman having to bear the stigma of infertility. Focussing on the interface between psychosocial and physical disabilities, Renu Addlakha examines the emerging paradigm of disability, interrogating notions of deviance, difference and diversity.

    PROGRAMME 

    Thursday, 21st August 2008
    0930-1000. Inaugural Function.
    Mary John, Director, CWDS

    Vibha Chaturvedi, Director, WSDC

    Overview of the Seminar

    Renu Addlakha, CWDS

    Inaugural Address

    Deepak Pental: Vice-Chancellor, University of Delhi.

    SESSION 1: DISABILITY MOVEMENT AND DISABILITY STUDIES

    IN PERSPECTIVE

    Chairperson: Vibha Chaturvedi , WSDC, University of Delhi

    Discussant: Suranjita Ray, Daulat Ram College, University of Delhi

    1000-1050

    Historical Development of Disability Rights Movement in India

    G.N. Karna,

    Society for Disability and Rehabilitation Studies, New Delhi


    Development of the Discipline of Disability Studies

    Jagdish Chander

    Department of Political Science, Hindu College University of Delhi

    1050-1120 DISCUSSANT’S COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION

    1120-1150 TEA BREAK

    SESSION 2: SELF-IDENTITY AND PSYCHOSOCIAL DISABILITY

    Chairperson: Mary John, CWDS

    Discussant: Shalini Anant, Miranda House, University of Delhi

    1150-1230

    Bhalo Meye: Cultural construction of gender and disability in Bengal

    Nandini Ghosh

    Sanchar, Kolkata

    Gender and Mental Disability in India – Some Uneasy Inheritance of an Existing Discourse

    Shilpa Anand

    Doctoral Candidate, Disability Studies Programme, University of Illinois at Chicago (USA)

    From Mental Illness to Disability: Choices for Women User/Survivors of Psychiatry in Self and Identity Constructions

    Bhargavi V Davar

    Centre for Advocacy in Mental Health, Pune


    1230-1300 DISCUSSANT’S COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION

    1300-14000 LUNCH

    SESSION 3 : LAW, POLICY AND THE GLOBAL SOCIETY

    Chairperson: Uma Chakravarti, Feminist Historian

    Discussant: Shobhana Warrier, Kamla Nehru College, University of Delhi

    1400-1440

    Sameness and Difference: Twin Track Empowerment for Women with Disabilities

    Amita Dhanda

    National Academy of Legal Studies and Research, Hyderabad

    Need for a Framework for Combined Disability and Gender Budgeting

    Asha Hans, Sansristi, Bhubaneswar

    Amrita M. Patel, School of Women’s Studies, Utkal University, Bhubaneswar

    S.B. Agnihotri, Cabinet Secretariat, Government of India, New Delhi

    1440-1510 DISCUSSANT’S COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION

    1510-1530 TEA

    SESSION 4: MOTHERHOOD, MEDICINE AND CARE

    Chairperson: Patricia Uberoi, Centre for Chinese Studies, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi

    Discussant: Deepali Bhanot, Janaki Devi Memorial College, University of Delhi

    1530-1630

    Prenatal Diagnosis: Where do We Draw the Line?

    Anita Ghai, Department of Psychology, Jesus and Mary College,

    Rachana Johri, Department of Psychology, Lady Shri Ram College for Women, University of Delhi


    Exploring constructs of Intellectual Disability and Personhood in Haryana and Delhi

    Nilika Mehrotra, Centre for the Study of Social Systems, Jawaharlal Nehru University

    Shubhangi Vaidya, Regional Service Division, Indira Gandhi National Open University


    Social Context of Disability and Caregiving

    Upali Chakravarti, School of Community Health and Social Medicine, Jawaharlal Nehru University


    1630-1700 DISCUSSANT’S COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION


    Friday, 22nd August 2008

    SESSION 5: HEARING IMPAIRMENT AND THE GLOBAL POLITICS OF DEAFNESS

    Chairperson: Ravinder Kaur, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi

    Discussant: Amrit Kaur Basra, Delhi College of Arts and Commerce, University of Delhi

    0930-1020

    The Inner World of Adolescent Girls with Hearing Impairment: Two Case Studies

    Sandhya Limaye

    School of Social Work, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai


    ‘I am deaf, you are deaf, we are the same’: Cultivated Sameness and Present Oriented Affinities

    Michele Friedner

    Doctoral Candidate, Department of Anthropology, University Of California (Berkeley) USA

    1020-1050 DISCUSSANT’S COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION

    1050-1120 TEA BREAK


    SESSION 6: EXPERIENCE AND IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION
    Chairperson: Malavika Karlekar, Editor, Indian Journal of Gender Studies

    Discussant: Asha Tandon, Daulat Ram College, University of Delhi.

    1120-1230

    Deformity and Social Exclusion: Experiences of Persons Affected by Leprosy

    Surabhi Tandon Mehrotra

    Independent Researcher, Delhi



    Discussant: Gita Lakhanpal, Sri Guru Nanak Dev Khalsa College, University of Delhi


    A Woman Without a Child: Disabling Consequences of Infertility in India
    Sabiha Hussain
    Centre for Women’s Development Studies, New Delhi


    The Disability Paradigm in Perspective
    Renu Addlakha
    Centre for Women’s Development Studies, New Delhi

    1230-1300 DISCUSSANT’S COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION

    1300-1400 LUNCH

    SESSION 7: DISABILITY, CIVIL SOCIETY AND EMPOWERMENT

    Chairperson: Kumud Sharma, Centre for Women’s Development Studies

    Discussant: Shubhra Seth, Indraprastha College for Women, University of Delhi

    1400-1440

    Social Inclusion of Disabled People: Is It Still a Distant Reality?

    Jeeja Ghosh,

    Human Rights Law Network, Kolkata


    Politics of Self-help: Disability and the Neoliberal Indian State

    Vandana Chaudhry,

    Doctoral Candidate, Disability Studies Programme, University of Illinois at Chicago (USA)

    1440-1510 DISCUSSANT’S COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION

    1510-1530 TEA

    SESSION 8: VISUAL CULTURE AND DISABILITY

    Discussant: Roma Chatterji, Department of Sociology, University of Delhi

    Discussant: G. Arunima, Women’s Studies Programme, Jawaharlal Nehru University

    1530-1610

    Body/Art: Photographic Project on Deafness and Communication

    Jose Abad

    Freelance Curator


    Blind with Camera: Photography by the Visually Impaired

    Partho Bhowmick

    Freelance Photographer

    1610-1630 DISCUSSANT’S COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION

    1630-1700 OPEN DISCUSSION: What Can We Do To Prioritise Disability in Our Work and Lives?

    Moderators: Manjeet Bhatia, Women’s Studies and Development Centre, University of Delhi

    Renu Addlakha, Centre for Women’s Development Studies

    VOTE OF THANKS