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On the Possibility of a Disabled Life in Capitalist Ruins: Black Workers with Sickle Cell Disorder in England

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posted on 2021-02-10, 11:41 authored by Simon Dyson, Maria Berghs, Karl Atkin, Anne-Marie Greene
The link between workers with sickle cell disorder (SCD) and employment has until now been seen through the lens of the person's disease, not their relationship to work (paid and unpaid). Using SCD as a case study, we foreground relations of employment, setting sickle cell and work into ecological context. In 2018, two focus group discussions and 47 depth-interviews were conducted with black disabled workers living with SCD across England. The relational concepts of Anna Tsing (2015) - salvage accumulation, entanglement and precarity - were used as an analytical framework to assess the reported experiences. To understand the experiences of those with SCD and employment, it is necessary to apprehend the whole ecology of their bonds to their bodies; their social relationships of kin and family; and their wider social relations to communities. Paid employment breaks bonds crucial to those living with SCD. First, employers can only extract sufficient productive value from workers if they disregard the necessary self-care of a precarious body. Secondly, reproducing labour though child-care, housework and care work is a taken-for-granted salvage central to capitalism. Thirdly, voluntary and community work are salvaged for free by employers towards their accumulation of profits. People with SCD find bond-making activities that create the commons life-affirming, thereby reconfiguring our understanding of connections between disability and work.

History

Citation

Social Science & Medicine, Volume 272, March 2021, 113713

Author affiliation

School of Business

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Social Science and Medicine

Volume

272

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0277-9536

Acceptance date

2021-01-19

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-01-27

Language

en

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