|
Obituaries of LGBT people
Jo Campling
Jo Campling died a few days ago after several months living with cancer.
Jo was one of
the disabled people's movement's earliest and staunchest allies and
supporters.
She was especially influential in her own writing and also behind the scenes
by bringing the work of disability activists and scholars to the fore
through her involvement with organisations such as RADAR, the British
Association of Social Work (BASW) and publishers Virago, Macmillan and the
Policy Press.
Her first two publications: 'Better Lives for Disabled Women' (1979) and
'Images of Ourselves; women with disabilities talking' (1981) provide a
clear and accessible insight how disabled women were and remain
economically, politically and socially disadvantaged in contemporary
society.
'Better Lives' contains 11 short chapters covering many aspects of disabled
women's lives including sexuality, motherhood and employment. 'Images of
Ourselves' is as the title suggests the unedited experiences of twenty four
disabled women of various ages with a variety of impairments.
In 1981 she organised a conference for the BASW and Central Council on the
Education and Training of Social Work (CCETSW) entitled 'The Handicapped
Person: a new perspective for social workers' with contributions from now
familiar disabled activists and writers such as Merry Cross, Micheline
Mason, Frankie Raiher, Pat Rock, and Mike Oliver which ushered in what we
now know as the social model of disability.
Back to obituaries |