phpa7ydxg
Syrian adolescents living in Al Mafraq, Jordan © Nathalie Bertrams/GAGE 2023

‘Had I been a girl it would have been a big problem’: An intersectional approach to the social exclusion of refugee adolescents with disabilities in Jordan

Home PagePublicationsJournal articles‘Had I been a girl it would have been a big problem’: An intersectional approach to the social exclusion of refugee adolescents with disabilities in Jordan

publication

‘Had I been a girl it would have been a big problem’: An intersectional approach to the social exclusion of refugee adolescents with disabilities in Jordan

04.04.2023 | Jordan

Country

Jordan

Capability domains

Voice and agency

Audience type

Researcher

Year of publication

2023

Read online

Authors

Kate Pincock, Nicola Jones and Kifah Bani Odeh

The past decade has seen marked improvements in terms of global commitments to the inclusion of people with disabilities, as evidenced in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and in the 2018 United Nations (UN)-wide Disability Inclusion Strategy, which calls for sustainable and transformative progress on disability inclusion. In line with these commitments, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) launched a new Age, Gender and Diversity Policy in 2018, calling for greater attention to the inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of UNHCR’s work in contexts of forced displacement. Despite this progress, there is still very limited understanding about the lived experiences of young people with disabilities in refugee communities. To address this gap, this paper uses an intersectional framework to analyse the experiences of young refugees with physical disabilities living in Jordan.

Suggested citation

Pincock, K., Jones, N., & Bani Odeh, K. (2023). ‘Had I been a girl it would have been a big problem’: An intersectional approach to the social exclusion of refugee adolescents with disabilities in Jordan. Childhood0(0). (https://doi.org/10.1177/09075682231169264)