1 Mind the Gap: Bridging Disability Studies and Bioarchaeology - An Introduction
Part I Theoretical Perspectives on Impairment and Disability
2 Accommodating Critical Disability Studies in Bioarchaeology
3 Consideration of Disability from the Perspective of the Medical Model
4 Historiography of Disablement and the South Asian context: The case of Shah Daula’s chuhas
Part II Ethnohistorical Interpretations: Ability, Disability, and Alternate Ability
5 Differently Abled: Africanisms, Disability and Power in the Age of Transatlantic Slavery
6 Kojo’s Dis/ability: The Interpretation of Spinal Pathology in the Context of an 18th-Century Jamaican Maroon Community
7 Rendered unfit: “Defective” children in the Erie County Poorhouse
Part III Quantitative Methods in Impairment and Disability: Bioarchaeological Approaches
8 The Bioarchaeology of Back Pain
9 Using Population Health Constructs to Explore Impairment and Disability in Knee Osteoarthritis
10 Quantifying Impairment and Disability in Bioarchaeological Assemblages
11 Injuries, Impairment, and Intersecting Identities: The Poor in Buffalo, NY 1851-1913
Part IV Case Studies of Impairment and Disability in the Past
12 Impairment, Disability, and Identity in the Middle Woodland Period: Life at the Juncture of Achondroplasia, Pregnancy, and Infection
13 Attempting to Distinguish Impairment from Disability in the Bioarchaeological Record: An Example from DeArmond Mound (40RE12) in East Tennessee
14 Anglo-Saxon Concepts of Dis/ability: Placing Disease at Great Chesterford in its Wider Context. .