‘We only got Coca-Cola’: Disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in Southeast Nigeria

Background: Empowerment is the generic name for support services for persons with disability in Nigeria. In it, the elites of the society play leading roles. Special events such as anniversaries, Christmas seasons, wealthy people’s birthdays, investiture of new titles and campaigns before general el...

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Main Authors: Okechukwu V. Nwokorie, Patrick J. Devlieger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2019-04-01
Series:African Journal of Disability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ajod.org/index.php/ajod/article/view/444
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spelling doaj-e06525c4fccd49bc96b9b78e03ad82b92020-11-25T02:10:37ZengAOSISAfrican Journal of Disability2223-91702226-72202019-04-0180e1e1310.4102/ajod.v8i0.444183‘We only got Coca-Cola’: Disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in Southeast NigeriaOkechukwu V. Nwokorie0Patrick J. Devlieger1Interculturalism, Migration and Minorities Research Centre (IMMRC), Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Leuven, LeuvenInterculturalism, Migration and Minorities Research Centre (IMMRC), Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Leuven, LeuvenBackground: Empowerment is the generic name for support services for persons with disability in Nigeria. In it, the elites of the society play leading roles. Special events such as anniversaries, Christmas seasons, wealthy people’s birthdays, investiture of new titles and campaigns before general elections often provide occasions for empowerment programmes. Objectives: This article explores discourses of empowerment of persons with disability in Southeast Nigeria. We concentrate on the relation between local elites and the disability community and how it impacts our understanding of empowerment. Conceptualising empowerment as worldmaking, and disability as something that is ambiguous, we challenge the assumption that the aim of empowerment of disabled people is to improve their (disabled people’s) quality of life. Method: This article relies on research data (collected between January 2014 and January 2017) comprising 72 interviews and participant observations from 27 persons with disability, and 13 social workers and senior government officials. Results: We conclude that discourses of empowerment of disabled people frame disability as loss and tend to conceal the personal stories and survival operations of disabled people. Conclusion: Empowerment discourses ironically provide the platform for local power elites to ‘ride’ to fame on the backs of disabled to extend their influence in society. In the current neoliberal environment of unequal access to opportunities, disabled people must ‘play along’ as a survival strategy. Our qualitative data provide opportunities to reflect on the tensions between the ‘local and the global’, thus indicating how disability issues intersect with other wider questions.https://ajod.org/index.php/ajod/article/view/444mobility disabilityempowerment paradoxsurvival strategyempowerment discoursecultureempowermentIgbo culturelocal and globalpower elites
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Okechukwu V. Nwokorie
Patrick J. Devlieger
spellingShingle Okechukwu V. Nwokorie
Patrick J. Devlieger
‘We only got Coca-Cola’: Disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in Southeast Nigeria
African Journal of Disability
mobility disability
empowerment paradox
survival strategy
empowerment discourse
culture
empowerment
Igbo culture
local and global
power elites
author_facet Okechukwu V. Nwokorie
Patrick J. Devlieger
author_sort Okechukwu V. Nwokorie
title ‘We only got Coca-Cola’: Disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in Southeast Nigeria
title_short ‘We only got Coca-Cola’: Disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in Southeast Nigeria
title_full ‘We only got Coca-Cola’: Disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in Southeast Nigeria
title_fullStr ‘We only got Coca-Cola’: Disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in Southeast Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed ‘We only got Coca-Cola’: Disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in Southeast Nigeria
title_sort ‘we only got coca-cola’: disability and the paradox of (dis)empowerment in southeast nigeria
publisher AOSIS
series African Journal of Disability
issn 2223-9170
2226-7220
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Background: Empowerment is the generic name for support services for persons with disability in Nigeria. In it, the elites of the society play leading roles. Special events such as anniversaries, Christmas seasons, wealthy people’s birthdays, investiture of new titles and campaigns before general elections often provide occasions for empowerment programmes. Objectives: This article explores discourses of empowerment of persons with disability in Southeast Nigeria. We concentrate on the relation between local elites and the disability community and how it impacts our understanding of empowerment. Conceptualising empowerment as worldmaking, and disability as something that is ambiguous, we challenge the assumption that the aim of empowerment of disabled people is to improve their (disabled people’s) quality of life. Method: This article relies on research data (collected between January 2014 and January 2017) comprising 72 interviews and participant observations from 27 persons with disability, and 13 social workers and senior government officials. Results: We conclude that discourses of empowerment of disabled people frame disability as loss and tend to conceal the personal stories and survival operations of disabled people. Conclusion: Empowerment discourses ironically provide the platform for local power elites to ‘ride’ to fame on the backs of disabled to extend their influence in society. In the current neoliberal environment of unequal access to opportunities, disabled people must ‘play along’ as a survival strategy. Our qualitative data provide opportunities to reflect on the tensions between the ‘local and the global’, thus indicating how disability issues intersect with other wider questions.
topic mobility disability
empowerment paradox
survival strategy
empowerment discourse
culture
empowerment
Igbo culture
local and global
power elites
url https://ajod.org/index.php/ajod/article/view/444
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