Collection V: Episode 23. Disclosure: the social, political, cultural, and legal dimensions of the choice to disclose disability in the health sciences.
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Narrated by:
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By:
Author: Neera R. Jain
Citation: Jain, Neera R. "Political Disclosure: Resisting Ableism in Medical Education." Disability & Society 35, no. 3 (2020): 389–412. https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2019.1647149.
Description:
This episode opens Collection V, Disclosure: the social, political, cultural, and legal dimensions of the choice to disclose disability in the health sciences.
Jain introduces the concept of "political disclosure," a form of disability disclosure oriented towards leveraging disability identity for collective benefit and the destigmatization of disability in medicine–rather than securing accommodations. The article identifies three forms of political disclosure—visibility, upstanding, and activism—and examines the personal, relational, and institutional factors that tilt individuals toward or away from these acts. Grounded in disability studies and social theory, Jain's analysis situates students' disclosure practices within the broader ableist culture of medicine and foregrounds the value of disability epistemologies in medical education. Jain's work is grounded in interviews with disabled medical students and school officials across four medical schools. The episode also highlights resources for disability community-building in medicine that has flourished in the years since the article's publication.
Producer: Zoey Martin Lockhart, Lisa Meeks
Audio Engineer: Jacob Feeman
Transcript: Episode 23 Transcript
Release: 2026
Keywords:
Political Disclosure
Disability Disclosure
Disability Epistemologies