"Amidst the largest social uprising in our lifetime consideration for total liberation work is paramount to dismantling the interrelated ways racism, sexism, and classism work inextricably with ableism and speciesism. Vegans on Speciesism and Ableism: Ecoability Voices for Disability and Animal Justice edited by Anthony J. Nocella II and Amber E. George ignites readers to this collection action and invites us all to learn more about difference, diversity, and making real change."-Dr. Johnny Lupinacci, Washington State University
Dedication - Acknowledgements - Clifton Sanders:Foreword - Lea Lani Kinikini:Preface - Amber E. George/Anthony J. Nocella II: Introduction: Getting in the Outdoors with Disabilities: Fun, Collaboration, and Total Liberation - Chapter One S. Marek Muller: Got Autism? - Chapter Two Daniel Salomon: Getting to Solidarity: Toward An Interest-Based Conflict Resolution Approach To Resolving The Conflict between Ecoability Equity and Animal Equity - Chapter Three Birkan Tas: Selection for and against Disability: Assistance Dogs - Chapter Four Zoie (Zane) McNeill/ Rebecca Eli Long: Queering the Animate Body: Toxicity, Ecoability, and Multi-Species Biopolitics in Duplin County, North Carolina - Chapter Five T.N. Rowan:Trauma-Informed Activism: New Directions for Interpsecies Trauma in Ecoability and Critical Animal Studies - Elisa Stone: Afterword - Contributors' Biographies - Index
Anthony J. Nocella II, Ph.D., scholar-activist, is an editor of the Peace Studies Journal and a professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at Salt Lake Community College. He is the co-founder of disability pedagogy, critical animal studies, terrorization, and ecoability and has published over one hundred articles and forty books.
Amber E. George, Ph.D., editor of the Journal for Critical Animal Studies, is Assistant Professor at Galen College where she teaches courses in philosophy, sociology, and cultural studies. Dr. George most recently edited Gender and Sexuality in Critical Animal Studies and The Intersectionality of Critical Animal, Disability, and Environmental Studies.