Including African Disability History in Disability Studies Education: Reflections from a Non-Expert

Authors

  • Geoffrey Reaume Associate Professor, Faculty of Health, York University

Keywords:

Africa, Disability History, Historiography

Abstract

This article will discuss the ways in which disability history can promote educational inclusion through learning about African disability history. This will include a discussion of the need to re-orient disabled people’s history away from narratives dominated by white northern, especially Anglo-American narratives and raising awareness of, and appreciation for, histories of disabled people in a field that is developing at a rapid pace. The following is therefore a reflection by a non-expert on disability historians whose work on varied African historical and cultural contexts is essential to underlining how disability history is global. It can be taught as such, thanks to the work of scholars and activists like those cited in this article.

Author Biography

Geoffrey Reaume, Associate Professor, Faculty of Health, York University

Associate Professor, Faculty of Health, York University

Published

2026-06-18

How to Cite

Reaume, G. (2026). Including African Disability History in Disability Studies Education: Reflections from a Non-Expert. Canadian Journal of Disability Studies, 15(2), 122–155. Retrieved from https://cjds.uwaterloo.ca/index.php/cjds/article/view/1381