Disability Studies

The Disability Studies Program offers an A.B. in Disability Studies and a minor in Disability Studies.

Over the past three decades, disability studies has emerged as a robust and vibrant field of intellectual inquiry, bringing together cutting edge research in the humanities, social sciences, and health sciences. The discipline analyzes the cultural and political significance of disability, examining the construction and production of disability in history and in the present moment. Disability studies hones critical tools to analyze how societies grapple with physical and mental difference, the way disability becomes a site for negotiating stigma and social power, and questions of normativity and deviance.

Disability is a fundamental dimension of human diversity. One in every four Americans lives with a disability, making it our country’s largest minority population. Students increasingly recognize that gaining a more sophisticated understanding of disability experience is a critical element in their education, and one that will help prepare them for a growing number of disability-specific careers. Drawing from rich offerings in disciplines as various as Anthropology, Bioethics, English, Health Systems Administration, Nursing, Philosophy, Psychology, Theater and Performance Studies, Theology and Religious Studies, and Women’s and Gender Studies, the program in Disability Studies enables students to explore this critical facet of human diversity in an in-depth fashion, as it relates to their broader intellectual interests and to their professional aspirations.

Additionally, Washington is home to some of the most influential institutions bearing on the experience of disability nationally and globally, encompassing the fields of law, medicine, policy, advocacy, research, and cultural production. Undergraduates come to Georgetown eager to become leaders in these fields, and they bring with them a critical humanist perspective, drawn by Georgetown’s commitment to social justice and educating the whole person. Disability Studies enables them to integrate their intellectual and professional aspirations, nurturing critical thinking and engendering a greater openness to human diversity. 

Major in Disability Studies

Requirements for the Major

The major requires 31 credits in Disability Studies, as follows:

  1. DBST-2270 Intro to Disability Studies (3 credits)
  2. One dedicated DBST course in disability culture or one dedicated DBST course in disability law, policy, and advocacy. The two courses that currently fulfill this requirement are DBST-3304 Introduction to Deaf Culture and DBST-2249 Disability Law and Activism.
  3. 12 credits in distribution requirements as follows:
    • 6 credits in the natural sciences or social sciences, such as ANTH-2256 Disability and Culture; BIOL-3940 Genomics, Disability and Health; SOCI-3709 Sociology of Health/Illness; or other eligible courses with the corresponding DBST attribute
    • 3 credits in the humanities (literature, arts, history, theology, philosophy), such as ENGL-2680 Disability and the Arts; or ENGL-2702 Grief and Grievance; or any other eligible course with the corresponding DBST attribute
    • 3 credits in ethics, such as PHIL-2002 Bioethics and Disability or any other eligible course with the corresponding DBST attribute
  4. A 4000-level or above seminar in Disability Studies (3 credits)
  5. At least 6 credits in Disability Studies core classes other than those taken to satisfy requirements (1) and (2) above. Note that these may overlap with the distribution requirements in (3).
  6. EITHER a senior thesis supervised by a member of the Disability Studies faculty or affiliated faculty OR a major community-based learning project culminating in a final report and oral presentation, supervised by a Disability Studies faculty member, affiliated faculty, or a community member outside the university with expertise in disability issues (advocacy, arts, or policy, for example), with the oversight of a Georgetown faculty member (4 credits, one in Fall and three in Spring).
  7. Elective classes from among the classes with the DBST attribute, or others with approval of the program director, to bring the total number of credits in the major to 31.

A maximum of two courses taken elsewhere (i.e., study abroad or summer courses) may be counted as electives in the major, with approval of the steering committee.

Minor in Disability Studies

Requirements for the Minor

Six courses are required to complete the minor in Disability Studies:

  • DBST-2270 (or ENGL-2700) Introduction to Disability Studies 
  • Three Disability Studies core courses 
  • Two elective courses that engage disability in theory or practice 

For a list of core courses and approved electives, please visit the program website at https://disabilitystudies.georgetown.edu/minor-requirements/.

A maximum of two courses taken elsewhere (i.e., study abroad or summer courses) may be counted as electives in the minor, with approval of the steering committee.

To declare the minor, students should complete the interest form available on our website, disabilitystudies.georgetown.edu . Please direct questions to rk75@georgetown.edu or lsr@georgetown.edu .