A Qualitative Look at Serious Legal Problems for People with Disabilities in Central Canada
Bibliography
While outside of the scope of this report, the following is a list of literature that may be of interest to those undertaking future work in this area.
- Banks, K., Chaykowski, R. P., & Slotsve, G. A. (2013). The disability accommodation gap in Canadian workplaces: What does it mean for law, policy, and an aging population. Canadian Labour & Employment Law Journal, 17(2),295–344.
- Baldry, E. (2014). Disability at the margins: Limits of the law. Griffith Law Review, 23(3), 370–388.
- Crock, M., Ernst, C., & Ao, R. M. (2012). Where disability and displacement intersect: Asylum seekers and refugees with disabilities. International Journal of Refugee Law, 24(4), 735–764.
- Degeneffe, C. E., & Terciano, J. (2011). Rosa’s Law and the Language of Disability: Implications for Rehabilitation Counseling. Rehabilitation Research, Policy and Education, 25(4), 163–172.
- Gibson, B. E., & Mykitiuk, R. (2012). Health care access and support for disabled women in Canada: Falling short of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities: A qualitative study. Women's Health Issues, 22(1), e111–e118.
- Hamilton, J. W., & Koshan, J. (2013). The Supreme Court, ameliorative programs, and disability: Not getting it. Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, 25(1), 56–80.
- Maki, H. & Sheldon, C.T. (2019). Trauma-informed strategies in public interest litigation: Avoiding unintended consequences through integrative legal perspectives. In Supreme Court Law Review, Second Series, Vol. 90, eds. Milne, C. and Roach, K. Toronto: LexisNexis, 65.
- Kovacs Burns, K., & Gordon, G. L. (2010). Analyzing the impact of disability legislation in Canada and the United States. Journal of Disability Policy Studies, 20(4), 205–218.
- Malhotra, R., & Rowe, M. (2014). Exploring disability identity and disability rights through narratives: Finding a voice of their own. London: Routledge.
- McAllister, A., & Leeder, S. R. (2018). Distrusting doctors’ evidence: A qualitative study of disability income support policy makers in Australia and Ontario, Canada. Australian Health Review, 42(4), 475–480.
- Oliver, M. (2017). Defining impairment and disability. In Disability and Equality Law, eds. Emens, E. F. & Stein, M. A. London: Routledge, 3.
- Pazey, B. L., & Cole, H. A. (2015). Tensions and transformations: Using an ethical framework to teach a course on disability law to future educational leaders. Journal of School Leadership, 25(6), 1130–1168.
- Perlin, M. L. (2019). “There’s voices in the night trying to be heard”: The potential impact of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities on domestic mental disability law. Brooklyn Law Review84 (3), 873–908.
- Perlin, M. L. (2014). Understanding the intersection between international human rights and mental disability law. In Arrigo, B. A. & Bersot, H. Y. (eds), The Routledge Handbook of International Crime and Justice Studies. London: Routledge, 191.
- Prince, M. J. (2010). What about a disability rights act for Canada? Practices and lessons from America, Australia, and the United Kingdom. Canadian Public Policy, 36(2), 199–214.
- Sheldon, C. T., Spector, K. & Perez, M. (2016). Re-centering equality from the inside: The interplay between sections 7 and 15 of the Charter in challenges to psychiatric detention. National Journal of Constitutional Law 35(2), 193–234.
- Waddington, L. (2011). Reasonable accommodation: Time to extend the duty to accommodate beyond disability? NTM| NJCM-Bulletin 36 (2), 186–198.
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