![]() ![]() ![]() Living with disabilities are represented (or not) within popular media andĬulture. ![]() However, despite this motion to progress, there remains a hugeĭisparity between the theoretical recognition of disability and the way that people The last fifty years there have been many positive changes to the way thatĭisability and disabled rights are perceived within mainstream UK politics and This blog is the first in a series Caroline will be writing for us, and explores some of the discourse surrounding disabled women in Scotland. This project connects with Engender’s on-going commitment to achieving gender parity within the Scottish media, and our Disabled Women: Our Bodies, Our Rights project, which examines the rights of disabled women and their reproductive journeys within current social care practices and government policy. ![]() Visibly Invisible: Cultural representations of women with disabilites in contemporary scottish and uk media Engender has been working with University of Stirling student Caroline Darke on a project exploring some of the issues around the representation (or rather, lack) of women with disabilities within the mainstream Scottish and UK media. ![]()
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