Article written by 2010 DPDF Spaces of Inquiry Fellow Aimi Hamraie, featured in Disability Studies Quarterly, Volume 32, No. 4:

In Disability Studies, Universal Design (UD) is a concept that is often borrowed from an architectural or design context to mean an ideology of inclusion and flexibility with a range of applications in education, technology, and other milieus. This paper returns to UD as a design phenomenon, considering knowledge production practices as conditions of possibility for inclusive design. UD appropriates and redefines normalizing research methods, namely anthropometry, that were developed in the 19th century for uses that are contrary to disability rights and justice, such as eugenics, colonialism, and scientific racism. The paper argues that critical disability theory should understand work in UD research and design practice in order to formulate a nuanced, new materialist and historical disability epistemology, particularly in engagements with scientific knowledge.

Publication Details

Title
Universal Design Research as a New Materialist Practice
Authors
Hamraie, Aimi
Publisher
Ohio State University
Publish Date
January 2012
Citation
Hamraie, Aimi, Universal Design Research as a New Materialist Practice (Ohio State University, January 2012).
Menu