About our Lab

Members of the Social Justice in Disability and Health Lab include doctoral and undergraduate students, as well as postdoctoral fellows, at the University of Virginia, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, and Virginia Commonwealth University (Dr. Perrin’s former academic position) sharing a common passion for using science to work toward social justice in the context of disability and health. A fundamental goal of our research is to bring culturally sensitive and empirically supported behavioral health services to diverse underserved populations with disabilities and chronic health conditions, as well as to improve the health of populations who experience marginalization and oppression.
From this perspective, disparities in health are one of the most shocking and inhumane forms of oppression, and we believe that the academic and medical communities have a central role to play in their alleviation. “Social justice in disability and health” encompasses three interrelated facets. These are:
- Cultural, familial, and international approaches to disability rehabilitation and adjustment, particularly in underserved and minority populations with neurological conditions
- Social determinants of health (e.g., stigma, access to integrated care, personal and collective strengths)
- Social justice approaches to understand and dismantle oppression