Drat, I had a much better written and more extensive response to the question asked, and then lost it when my email timed out!
Yes, there are responses to disability within radical movements, though personally I have often found them lacking. Either people with disabilities are just another item on the roll call of the oppressed, with access issues and health care seen as "their" main needs, or you have the approach where disability is seen as solely a product of capitalism, which ignores the fact that impairment, ill health and aging are a natural part of being human.
Personally, I've been involved in the anarchist community for most of my adult life and so was asked to write a piece on disability issues for Fifth Estate ("An Anarchist Response to Disability," Fifth Estate, 41 (374), Winter 2007) as an introduction to the social model and practices consistent with anarchism that work with it. It's nothing earthshattering but if anyone is interested, email me and I will send you a copy. I don't think Fifth Estate is available electronically. There are usually disability-related workshops and activist meetings as part of the annual London Anarchist Bookfair (http://www.anarchistbookfair.org/), the largest anarchist event in Britain. I've also written a chapter for an upcoming book for radical/alternative parents of kids with special needs, which you can find out more about here: http://www.shortbusbook.blogspot.com/
And that's just me, hopefully others can hop in with what they get up to when they're off being political activists and leaving their academic gowns in the office!
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