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Session Submission Type: Invited Session (90 minute)
In 2023, the National Institutes of Health designated people with disabilities as a “health disparity population,” acknowledging the disproportionate health challenges they face and marking a major step toward health equity. This recognition prioritized research to understand and address the root causes of health disparities for people with disabilities—alongside racial and ethnic minoritized groups, those with lower socioeconomic status, and sexual and gender minorities. However, shifts in the federal landscape have since deprioritized people with disabilities in NIH and federally funded research, undermining this progress. As equity for people with disabilities fades from federal research priorities, it is imperative that sociologists champion research in this area. This session showcases innovative research and scholars who advance this agenda, applying a sociological lens to deepen understanding of social inequality and health disparities affecting people with disabilities. Guided by Dr. Jennifer James, a Black Feminist scholar, the moderated panel will feature leading scholars who take intersectional and structural approaches to studying disability and health. The dialogue will invite audience engagement to foster critical exchange and advance sociology’s commitment to engaged research and to creating a more just and inclusive society.
Subini Annamma, Stanford University
Laura Mauldin, University of Connecticut
David Nicholas Pettinicchio, University of Toronto