edited by Kelly Fagan Robinson, Mark T. Carew and Nora Ellen Groce
contributions by Julia K. Modern, Valéria Aydos, Harshadha Balasubramanian, Rebekah Cupitt, Sara M. Acevedo, Sumi Colligan, Valerie Black, Nell A. Koneczny, Erin L. Durban, Krisjon Olson, Mark R. Bookman, Carol Rivas and Julia F. Sauma
illustrated by Indigo Ayling
introduction by Kelly Fagan Robinson
preface by Mark T. Carew
afterword by Michele Friedner
Rutgers University Press
eISBN: 978-1-9788-4148-2 | Cloth: 978-1-9788-4146-8 | Paper: 978-1-9788-4145-1

ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Inaccessible Access ethnographically addresses barriers to inclusion within knowledge-making. It focuses on the social, environmental, communicative, and epistemological barriers that people with disabilities confront and embody throughout the course of their learning, living and in the specific context of their Higher Education Institutions and in research. It is presented by a neurodiverse, disabled, and non-cis cohort of authors, all of whom acknowledge a continuum of (in)access which is available to each contributor contingent on their inherent intersectionalities and alterities. The authors and editors of this book foreground the work that has yet to be done on recognising the value of non-normative ways of approaching, being in and knowing research and higher education, particularly in cases where disablity-centred epistemologies are side-lined in confrontation with institutional norms, even within existing discourses concerning equality and alterity.