Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Practices and discourses of ubuntu: Implications for an African model of disability?

View through CrossRef
Background: Southern African scholars and activists working in disability studies have argued that ubuntu or unhu is a part of their world view. Objectives: Thinking seriously about ubuntu, as a shared collective humanness or social ethics, means to examine how Africans have framed a struggle for this shared humanity in terms of decolonisation and activism. Method: Three examples of applications of ubuntu are given, with two mainly linked to making explicit umaka. Firstly, ubuntu is linked to making visible the invisible inequalities for a common humanity in South Africa. Secondly, it becomes correlated to the expression of environmental justice in West and East African countries. Results: An African model of disability that encapsulates ubuntu is correlated to how Africans have illustrated a social ethics of a common humanity in their grassroots struggles against oppression and disablement in the 20th century. Ubuntu also locates disability politically within the wider environment and practices of sustainability which are now important to the post-2105 agenda, Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) and the (UN) Sustainable Development Goals linked to climate change. Conclusion: A different kind of political action linked to social justice seems to be evolving in line with ubuntu. This has implications for the future of disability studies.
Title: Practices and discourses of ubuntu: Implications for an African model of disability?
Description:
Background: Southern African scholars and activists working in disability studies have argued that ubuntu or unhu is a part of their world view.
Objectives: Thinking seriously about ubuntu, as a shared collective humanness or social ethics, means to examine how Africans have framed a struggle for this shared humanity in terms of decolonisation and activism.
Method: Three examples of applications of ubuntu are given, with two mainly linked to making explicit umaka.
Firstly, ubuntu is linked to making visible the invisible inequalities for a common humanity in South Africa.
Secondly, it becomes correlated to the expression of environmental justice in West and East African countries.
Results: An African model of disability that encapsulates ubuntu is correlated to how Africans have illustrated a social ethics of a common humanity in their grassroots struggles against oppression and disablement in the 20th century.
Ubuntu also locates disability politically within the wider environment and practices of sustainability which are now important to the post-2105 agenda, Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) and the (UN) Sustainable Development Goals linked to climate change.
Conclusion: A different kind of political action linked to social justice seems to be evolving in line with ubuntu.
This has implications for the future of disability studies.

Related Results

Trends in Disability Prevalence among Young People: Insights from the Growing Up in Ireland Study
Trends in Disability Prevalence among Young People: Insights from the Growing Up in Ireland Study
Background to the study This report draws on analyses of the two cohorts of the Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) study to examine trends in the prevalence of disability among 13-year-ol...
Disability Studies
Disability Studies
This article brings together key texts and theorists from disability studies, which is a growing and vibrant inter/multidisciplinary field. It is an area of inquiry that has been e...
‘Ubuntu’ African Philosophy or ‘Ubuntu’ as a Philosophy for Africa
‘Ubuntu’ African Philosophy or ‘Ubuntu’ as a Philosophy for Africa
This paper tries to develop a tenable philosophical idea of Ubuntu, that is, more specifically, a crystallized and sanitized African indigenous ethical perspective. Africa as an id...
Ubuntu is under siege: a reflection on the challenges of South Africa then and now
Ubuntu is under siege: a reflection on the challenges of South Africa then and now
Ubuntu is an African philosophy that has held together African communities for a millennium and its ethics ensures that law and order are maintained across different African commun...
Embracement of Social Work Values in the African Ubuntu Dimensions: Lessons from Dr. Julius Nyerere of Tanzania
Embracement of Social Work Values in the African Ubuntu Dimensions: Lessons from Dr. Julius Nyerere of Tanzania
The article employed a desk research method to reflect the evidence-based practice of the late Dr. Julius Nyerere (Ubuntu Champion of 2014). Dr. Nyerere embodied social work values...
Positive Psychology Interventions and Initiatives – The Ubuntu Approach – A Mapping Review Protocol
Positive Psychology Interventions and Initiatives – The Ubuntu Approach – A Mapping Review Protocol
This research protocol outlines a systematic investigation into the integration of Ubuntu philosophy with positive psychology to enhance well-being in African communities. Recogniz...
Parental migration and risks of intellectual disability and autism
Parental migration and risks of intellectual disability and autism
<p dir="ltr">Background: Intellectual disability and autism are overlapping heterogeneous neurodevelopmental conditions with early onset. The prevalence of diagnosed autism h...
Parental migration and risks of intellectual disability and autism
Parental migration and risks of intellectual disability and autism
<p dir="ltr">Background: Intellectual disability and autism are overlapping heterogeneous neurodevelopmental conditions with early onset. The prevalence of diagnosed autism h...

Back to Top