The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Disability is close to publication and thus can now be pre-ordered at the Oxford University Press website here.
I have copied the Table of Contents below for your inspection. (An earlier version of the TOC appears at the OUP website).
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Table of Contents
List of Contributors xv
Introduction xxiii
Adam Cureton and David Wasserman
PART 1 CONCEPTS, MODELS AND PERSPECTIVES OF DISABILITY
Theoretical Strategies to Define Disability 3
Jonas-Sébastien Beaudry
In Pursuit of Justice for Disability: Model Neutrality Revisited 22
Anita Silvers
Disability, Health, and Difference 46
Jerome Bickenbach
Habilitative Health and Disability 63
Lawrence C. Becker
Philosophy and the Apparatus of Disability 82
Shelley L. Tremain
Disability Liberation Theology 100
Rosemarie Garland-Thomson
PART 2 WELL-BEING, ADAPTATION, AND CAUSING DISABILITY
Disabilities and Well-Being: The Bad and the Neutral 123
Joshua Shepherd
Causing Disability, Causing Non-Disability: What’s the Moral Difference? 138
Joseph A. Stramondo and Stephen M. Campbell
Why Inflicting Disability is Wrong: The Mere Difference View and The Causation Based Objection 158
Julia Mosquera
Evaluative Diversity and the (Ir)Relevance of Well-Being 174
Sean Aas
PART 3 JUSTICE, EQUALITY, AND INCLUSION
Contractualism, Disability, and Inclusion 195
Christie Hartley
Civic Republican Disability Justice 212
Tom O’Shea
Disability and Disadvantage in the Capabilities Approach 229
Christopher A. Riddle
Disability and Partial Compliance Theory 245
Leslie Francis
Fair Difference of Opportunity 261
Adam Cureton and Alexander Kaufman
The Disability Case against Assisted Dying 279
Danny Scoccia
PART 4 KNOWLEDGE AND EMBODIMENT
Epistemic Exclusion, Injustice, and Disability 297
Jackie Leach Scully
What’s Wrong With “You Say You’re Happy, But. . . ” Reasoning? 310
Jason Marsh
Interactions with Delusional Others: Reflections on Epistemic Failures and Virtues 326
Josh Dohmen
Disability, Rationality, and Justice: Disambiguating Adaptive Preferences 343
Jessica Begon
PART 5 RESPECT, APPRECIATION, AND CARE
Ideals of Appreciation and Expressions of Respect 363
Thomas E. Hill, Jr.
The Limiting Role of Respect 380
Adam Cureton
Respect, Identification, and Profound Cognitive Impairment 399
John Vorhaus
Care and Disability: Friends or Foes 416
Eva Kittay
A Dignitarian Approach to Disability: From Moral Status to Social Status 432
Linda Barclay
PART 6 MORAL STATUS AND SIGNIFICANT MENTAL DISABILITIES
Cognitive Disability and Moral Status 451
Alice Crary
Dignity, Respect, and Cognitive Disability 467
Suzy Killmister
On Moral Status and Intellectual Disability: Challenging and Expanding the Debates 482
Licia Carlson
PART 7 INTELLECTUAL AND PSYCHIATRIC DISABILITY
Neurodiversity, Autism, and Psychiatric Disability: The Harmful Dysfunction Perspective 501
Jerome C. Wakefield, David Wasserman, and Jordan A. Conrad
Beyond Instrumental Value: Respecting the Will of Others and Deciding on Their Behalf 522
Dana Howard and David Wendler
Educational Justice for People with Intellectual Disabilities 541
Lorella Terzi
PART 8 TECHNOLOGY AND ENHANCEMENT
A Symmetrical View of Disability and Enhancement 561
Stephen M. Campbell and David Wasserman
Cognitive Disability and Embodied, Extended Minds 580
Zoe Drayson and Andy Clark
The Visible and the Invisible: Disability, Assistive Technology, and Stigma 598
Coreen McGuire and Havi Carel
Neurotechnologies and Justice by, with, and for Disabled People 616
Sara Goering and Eran Klein
Second Thoughts on Enhancement and Disability 633
Melinda C. Hall
PART 9 HEALTH-CARE ALLOCATION
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis and Disability Discrimination 653
Greg Bognar
Prioritization and Parity. Which Disabled Newborn Infants Should be Candidates for Scarce Life-Saving Treatment? 669
Dominic JC Wilkinson and Julian Savulescu
PART 10 REPRODUCTION AND PARENTING
Why People with Cognitive Disabilities are Justified in Feeling Disquieted by Prenatal Testing and Selective Termination 693
Chris Kaposy
Reproductive Choice, in Context: Avoiding Excess and Deficiency? 709
Richard Hull and Tom Shakespeare
Bioethics, Disability, and Selective Reproductive Technology: Taking Intersectionality Seriously 730
Christian Munthe
Procreation and Intellectual Disability: A Kantian Approach 744
Samuel J. Kerstein
Parental Autonomy, Children with Disabilities, and Horizontal Identities 759
Mary Crossley
Index
I am very excited to read all chapters. Thanks for the info.
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I hope you enjoy the book and find it useful, Nadhir Nasir!
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[…] to critical philosophical work on disability. Indeed, these problems contributed to the shape of The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Disability, about which I recently posted, and have evidently conditioned the formulation of the recently announced The Journal of Philosophy […]
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