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Disability Justice emerged in the mid-2000s from Queer, Trans, Black, Brown, and Immigrant Disabled activists who saw the limits of the mainstream disability rights movement. Leaders like Patty Berne, Mia Mingus, Stacey Milbern, Leroy Moore, and others called for a framework that not only demanded access, but also acknowledged how other identities, such as race, class, gender, sexuality, and immigration status shape Disabled people’s lives. Disability Justice insists that true liberation requires dismantling ableism alongside racism, capitalism, colonialism, and other systems of oppression.

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1901 Chapel Hill. Durham, NC 27707
CANDOR operates on the traditional, ancestral lands of the Eno, Occaneechi, Tuscarora, Shakori, Sissipahaw, and Saponi Peoples.  We pay respect to their elders, both past and present, who have been stewards of this land for generations. We engage in our work here with humility and reverence for the original peoples of this land and hold awareness of the legacy of violence, displacement, forced migration, and settlement. 
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