Embodied Inequality: Fatness, Human Rights and Systemic Oppression in Ontario Schools
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25071/1918-6215.39772Abstract
This article examines the reproduction of fat-bias and stigma in the Ontario education system. In an effort to understand fatness as a ground of discrimination, we will thoughtfully explore the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and precedent case law to understand how discrimination against fat bodies is an issue of disability discourse and systematic oppression of disabled persons. Through a close reading of the Ontario Physical Education Curriculum, this paper will identify how the current OPE curriculum discriminates against fat bodies.
Keywords: Human Rights, Disability Rights, Education, Physical Education, Fatness, Fat-Activism
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Authors retain copyright over their work and license their work for publication in Critical Disabilities Discourses under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivaties 4.0 International License (CC BY-ND 4.0). This means that the work is available for commercial and non-commercial use and reproduction provided that the original authors are credited and the original publication in this journal is cited, following standard academic practice.