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The Deaf Legal Dilemma : Challenging Equality Law

The Deaf Legal Dilemma : Challenging Equality Law

by Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

£90.00
MPN9781509980666
Prices updated 21 May 2026

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Product Description

Equality law is audist. Deaf communities around the world continue to encounter Deaf Legal Exclusion through legal frameworks that define them narrowly and restrict their rights. This book examines why these frameworks have not delivered equality in practice.It argues that the core issue is structural misrecognition: law protects deaf people only when they accept a definition based on impairment.Sign language, culture and community are treated as secondary.What appears to be inclusion is often a Deaf Legal Illusion: equality claimed in principle but absent in practice. The book analyses five models used to categorise deaf people in law and policy: disability, language minority, culturo-linguistic community, ethnic group and Indigenous group.Some appear in legislation; others are found in scholarship and advocacy.Each reflects only part of deaf people’s lives. Drawing on doctrinal and socio-legal analysis of the Equality Act 2010, case law of the ECtHR, and the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the book critiques how equality law relies on narrow definitions of fairness.It explores formal, substantive and transformative precepts of equality, assessing their ability to reflect deaf people’s experiences. It identifies the audist assumptions built into legal systems that expect deaf people to adapt to hearing norms, while withholding full recognition of sign language and community belonging. In response, the book proposes the Deaf Rights Model, which brings the five models together as complementary rather than competing.Alongside Deaf Equality Concepts, it offers a framework in which sign language, culture and community become central to legal thinking about equality. The Deaf Legal Dilemma establishes Deaf Legal Studies as a field grounded in the priorities and expertise of deaf communities.It invites lawmakers, practitioners and scholars to rethink the purpose of the law and the structures through which deaf people are recognised.

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