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Emancipatory Disability Research

Emancipatory disability research is a paradigm, articulated by Michael Oliver in 1992, that seeks to transform not merely the methods of research but its underlying social relations of production so that disabled people, rather than non-disabled academics, control the research. Drawing on a materialist analysis, Oliver argued that conventional research reproduces the oppression of disabled people by treating them as passive objects of study from which data are extracted for the careers of others. The emancipatory alternative reverses this: disabled people and their organisations set the agenda, shape the process, and determine how findings are used, while researchers place their skills at the service of that agenda and are accountable to it. The paradigm is grounded in the social model of disability, which locates disability in social barriers rather than individual impairment, and it treats research not as neutral inquiry but as a tool of empowerment and political change. Its measure of success is not academic output but whether it contributes to removing barriers and advancing disabled people's collective struggle.

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  1. Oliver, M. (1992). Changing the social relations of research production? Disability, Handicap & Society, 7(2), 101-114. DOI: 10.1080/02674649266780141

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ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Emancipatory Disability Research (Changing the Social Relations of Research Production). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/no/disability-studies/emancipatory-disability-research

ScholarGateEmancipatory Disability Research (Emancipatory Disability Research (Changing the Social Relations of Research Production)). Hentet 2026-06-24 fra https://scholargate.app/no/disability-studies/emancipatory-disability-research · Datasett: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026