All disabled people have the right to recognition before the law (CRPD Article 12) and to full participation in political and public life (Article 29). Understanding disability history helps explain why these rights remain contested—and how disabled people have always organized for justice. This section centers disabled people's expertise and is informed by disabled-led scholarship and organizing globally.
Disability history is often invisible. When it is told, disabled people appear as passive recipients of charity or medical treatment rather than as organizers, workers, artists, and community members.
This section tells a different story: how disability was constructed through industrialization, colonialism, and eugenics; how disabled people resisted control and built movements; and how the fights of the past shape the struggles of today.
Understanding this history helps us see that ableism is not natural or inevitable—it was built, and it can be dismantled.
How disabled people lived, worked, and were understood before factories and modern institutions. Covers diverse global frameworks, community roles, and the flexibility that existed before industrialization imposed rigid standards of "normal."
How factory work, statistics, and institutions created the modern idea of "normal" versus "defective" bodies. Covers the rise of poorhouses and asylums, industrial injury, colonial expansion of European disability frameworks, and the roots of eugenics.
How military conflict and empire-building produced mass disability, imposed Western classifications on colonized peoples, and created systems of control. Covers forced labor, mission schools, veterans' movements, medical experimentation, and resistance.
How eugenics became a dominant global system for controlling and erasing disabled people. Covers sterilization laws, the growth of institutions, immigration exclusions, Nazi Aktion T4, and disabled people's resistance.
How disabled people organized before modern disability rights. Covers Deaf schools and sign language communities, blind cooperatives, psychiatric survivor resistance, veterans' unions, labor organizing, and mutual aid in Black, Indigenous, and immigrant communities.
How disabled people built a movement that transformed disability from a medical issue into a civil rights issue. Covers the Berkeley CIL, global spread of IL principles, the fight for transportation and housing access, and the movement's lasting legacy.
How disabled people and allies fought to close institutions and create community alternatives. Covers legal battles, the role of IL activists, ongoing struggles, and what true community living requires.
How disabled people won major legal protections and continue fighting for full inclusion. Covers Section 504, the ADA, international developments, ADAPT, and ongoing organizing.
The story of how the Americans with Disabilities Act was won—through organizing, protest, and political strategy.
Key dates and milestones in disability history across different countries and regions.
How disabled people have been represented—and misrepresented—in media over time, and how disabled creators have told their own stories.
These pages are organized thematically rather than strictly chronologically—the timelines overlap because different forces shaped disability simultaneously.
If you're new to disability history: Start with Industrialization and the Birth of Ableism to understand how modern ableism was constructed, then read The Independent Living Movement to see how disabled people built alternatives.
If you want to understand eugenics: Read Eugenics and Institutionalization, which covers 1880–1945 and the global spread of sterilization and segregation.
If you want global perspectives: Disability, War, and Colonialism centers Global South experiences and colonial violence.
If you want to understand disability organizing: Early Disability Movements covers the period before modern rights movements, showing that disabled people have always resisted.
Disability is constructed. The categories, institutions, and attitudes we inherit were built through specific historical processes—industrialization, colonialism, eugenics, and war. They can be changed.
Disabled people have always organized. Even under severe repression, disabled people built communities, resisted control, and laid foundations for later movements.
History shapes the present. Modern disability systems—benefits categories, special education, guardianship, group homes—carry forward structures built in earlier eras. Understanding their origins helps us transform them.
Global perspectives matter. Disability history looks different across regions. Western frameworks were often imposed through colonialism and do not represent universal human experience.
This section centers disabled people's expertise and is informed by disabled-led organizing globally. For questions or to suggest additions, see How to Contribute.