z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Uncertain Subjects: Shaping Disabled Women’s Lives Through Income Support Policy
Author(s) -
Sally A. Kimpson
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
canadian journal of disability studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1929-9192
DOI - 10.15353/cjds.v9i3.647
Subject(s) - government (linguistics) , citizenship , embodied cognition , independence (probability theory) , power (physics) , income support , reading (process) , sociology , gender studies , psychology , political science , law , philosophy , linguistics , statistics , physics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , politics , computer science
This article provides a critical reading of one aspect of the “third mobilization of transinstitutionalization” (Haley & Jones, 2018), focused on how power is exercised through the B.C. government income support program (or the ambiguously-named B.C. Benefits), shaping the embodied lives of women living with chronic physical and mental impairments. I research and write as a woman living with a disabling chronic illness whose explicit focus is power: how it is enacted and what it produces in the everyday lives of women with disabling chronic conditions living on income support. I too have been the recipient of disability income support. Thus, my accounts are ‘interested.’ My writing seeks to create a disruptive reading that destabilizes common-sense notions about disabled women securing provincial income support benefits, in particular in British Columbia (B.C.), interviewed as part of my doctoral research. Despite public claims by the B.C. government to foster the independence, community participation, and citizenship of disabled people in B.C., the intersection of government policy and practices and how they are read and taken up by disabled women discipline them in ways that produce profound uncertainty in their lives, such that these women become uncertain subjects (Kimpson, 2015).

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here