War and Embodied Memory: Becoming Disabled in Sierra Leone

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Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., Jan 28, 2013 - Social Science - 274 pages

How do you become an 'amputee', 'war-wounded', 'victim' or 'disabled' person? This book describes how an amputee and war-wounded community was created after a decade long conflict (1991-2002) in Sierra Leone. Beginning with a general socio-cultural and historical analysis of what is understood by impairment and disability, it also explains how disability was politically created both during the conflict and post-conflict, as violence became part of the everyday. Despite participating in the neoliberal rebuilding of the nation state, ex-combatants and the security of the nation were the government’s main priorities, not amputee and war-wounded people.

In order to survive, people had to form partnerships with NGOs and participate in new discourses and practices around disability and rights, thus accessing identities of 'disabled' or 'persons with disabilities'. NGOs, charities and religious organisations that understood impairment and disability were most successful at aiding this community of people. However, since discourse and practice on disability were mainly bureaucratic, top-down, and not democratic about mainstreaming disability, neoliberal organisations and INGOs have caused a new colonisation of consciousness, and amputee and war-wounded people have had to become skilled in negotiating these new forms of subjectivities to survive.

From inside the book

Contents

Locating Disability in Sierra Leone
2000
2Intersections between Anthropology Disability Development
2011
Creating National
2011
Memory and DisabledSubjectivity? 6Rebuilding theSocial World
2011
Looking to the Future
1949
Bibliography
1972
Index
2014
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About the author (2013)

Maria Berghs is a Research Fellow in Health Sciences at the University of York, UK.

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