Double Discrimination, 9781805013532
Paperback
Unmasking racism and ableism: A vital call for intersectional equality.
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Double Discrimination

People of Colour with Learning Disabilities Defying Ableism and Racism

$41.37

  • Paperback

    192 pages

  • Release Date

    21 May 2026

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Summary

Whilst white privilege, unconscious bias and institutional discrimination have become high profile issues, learning disabled people of colour continue to be excluded from the conversation.

Responding to this crucial need to investigate the inequalities faced by learning disabled people of colour, Double Discrimination shines a bright light on the consequences of ignoring the combined impact of racism and ableism. From author, editor and award-winning social affairs journalist…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781805013532
ISBN-10:180501353X
Author:Saba Salman
Publisher:Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Imprint:Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:192
Release Date:21 May 2026
Weight:230g
Dimensions:229mm x 152mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

Double Discrimination is a necessary book that illuminates the layered realities of overlapping identities and the systemic biases shaping the lives of people of colour with learning disabilities. Saba Salman’s work is a call to action for equity, inclusion, and a deeper understanding of intersectionality, going beyond labels to centre the lived experiences of those most marginalised. – Marcia Brissett-Bailey, Editor of Black, Brilliant and Dyslexic; dyslexia advocate, educator, speaker, and thought leader in neurodiversity and intersectionalityThis beautifully written, comprehensive and quietly provocative book fills an important gap too many have not noticed. It is a book of stories, or counterstories even, of the lives of Raana, Saba’s younger sister and other people of colour with learning disabilities, underpinned by social justice, love, resistance and opportunities. A banger of a much-needed book. – Professor Sara Ryan, Manchester Metropolitan UniversitySaba Salman brilliantly exposes a rarely acknowledged but enduring scandal which is hidden from public view. This book is both fascinating and deeply shocking, taking the reader through changing attitudes to learning disability and documenting a literally fatal double discrimination. – Sir Norman Lamb, former Health Minister, NHS trust chair, mental health campaigner and author of Be More HumanA superb book written from the cutting-edge of social justice. Anyone interested in human difference and diversity should read it. – John Harris, Guardian journalist, critic and author of Maybe I’m AmazedSaba Salman is one of the most interesting and insightful writers and journalists in Britain today. She tackles issues that others don’t think about, never mind examine and explore. Her new book is hugely important, making us think about the nature of discrimination in its many forms. Equally importantly, it implicitly challenges us all to think about what type of society we want to live in, and what we need to do to achieve it. – Mark Malcomson CBE, Principal and Chief Executive of City LitFor too long the consequences of the intersection of ‘race’ and disability have been obscured from view. This book gives an insight into the many ways in which discrimination and ignorance lead to a lack of targeted, supportive services for individuals, families and communities. – Baroness Young of Hornsey OBE, member of the House of Lords, cultural advocate, and campaigner for social justice

About The Author

Saba Salman

Saba Salman is a British Asian author, editor and award-winning social affairs journalist writing on diversity, learning disability and autism. Her youngest sister, Raana, has the learning disability fragile X syndrome and influences her work. Saba’s first book Made Possible was published in 2020. Her journalism appears in Private Eye, The Guardian, The Independent and Byline Times, including reports on the inequalities faced by disabled people of colour. Saba won a National Press Award in 2020 in the reporting diversity category, and she was shortlisted in the British Journalism Awards, Asian Women of Achievement Awards, the European Diversity Awards. Saba edits the learning disability magazine Community Living. She chairs the charity Sibs, the national charity for disabled people’s siblings.

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