Disability Studies

Disability studies is a dynamic, interdisciplinary minor that explores disability as a human experience. Students study the history, culture, and human rights movements of disabled people, analyzing disability's intersections with race, class, gender, sexuality, and nationality. We assume there is no need to fix disabilities. Instead, we build a better world that accommodates and respects people with disabilities.

20+
internship opportunities
90+
students in the minor
10+
interdisciplinary departments

What You Can Do with a Disability Studies Minor

The disability studies minor prepares students for careers in psychology and counseling, health and medicine, government, nonprofit agencies, advocacy, public policy and administration, education, and social work. Graduates can pursue careers in:

  • Human and family services
  • Physical, occupational and speech therapy
  • K-12 education
  • Pre-med and pre-law
  • Arts and museum education
  • Adaptive recreation
  • Nonprofit organizations
  • Public interest groups
  • Advocacy
Colin Wilfrid, Disability minor student, playing horn

How Disability Studies Enriches Your Career

"As someone with an intellectual disability, I got to learn a lot about people with physical disabilities. It gave me a lot of broad advocacy skills to advocate on behalf of both physical and intellectual disabilities."

—Colin Wilfrid, Disability Studies Minor

Our Degree Program

Undergraduate students can earn a minor in disability studies with a focus on interdisciplinary studies and fieldwork that provides real-world experience. 

Teacher and kid in class

Learn from Experts in the Field

Students minoring in disability studies will learn from faculty who are known experts in their respective fields. Because each student is given the flexibility to build their own course of study built on their specific interests, there are opportunities to work with faculty representing a broad range of departments.

Children and student at daycare

Get Real-world Experience

Earn credit toward your minor while gaining hands-on experience in the field. You’ll have the opportunity to learn directly from people with disabilities through a wide variety of community partnerships in sports, schools, healthcare, direct support provision, the arts, and many other spheres of life.

Scholarships and Funding

Students in the Disability Studies Program can seek funding through the College of Arts and Sciences, which awards various scholarships both to incoming students and to those already attending the UO.

Undergraduate Scholarships

Academic Support

Students minoring in disability studies can consult our program director or seek support from the advising team at Tykeson College and Career Advising.

Tykeson Advising

Humanities News and CAS Events

May 7, 2024
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE, SPANISH - Leah Middlebrook, associate professor of comparative literature and Spanish for the College of Arts and Sciences, has been appointed as the new director of the Oregon Humanities Center. Her new position starts July 1, 2024. Middlebrook brings a rich humanities background to the position and she said the position is an honor she takes seriously.
May 7, 2024
LINGUISTICS - A historian and a linguist have received National Endowment of the Humanities (NEH) awards, a prestigious honor that goes to only 16% of applicants in a given year. The grants were awarded to Gabriela Pérez Báez, associate professor of linguistics and director of the Language Revitalization Lab, and Arafaat Valiani, an associate professor in the Department of History and affiliated faculty in the Global Health program.
May 1, 2024
FOLKLORE AND PUBLIC CULTURE - Nearly 50 years after his death, Steve Prefontaine still motivates Eugene and University of Oregon runners to honor him. Professor Daniel Wojcik remembers running with the iconic runner in the May-June issue of CAS Connection.

All News »


Dr Laura McLauchlan: Hedgehogs, Conservation and Attachment to other Animals: Embodied Approaches to Anti-Polarisation for our Shared Worlds
May13
Dr Laura McLauchlan: Hedgehogs, Conservation and Attachment to other Animals: Embodied Approaches to Anti-Polarisation for our Shared Worlds May 13 UO Campus
Physical Chemistry Seminar
May13
Physical Chemistry Seminar May 13 Willie and Donald Tykeson Hall
Film Series: Mafias and Narcotraffic
May13
Film Series: Mafias and Narcotraffic May 13 Global Scholars Hall
Film Series: Mafias and Narcotraffic
May13
Film Series: Mafias and Narcotraffic May 13 Global Scholars Hall
Film Series: Mafias and Narcotraffic
May13
Film Series: Mafias and Narcotraffic May 13 Global Scholars Hall
Envisioning Future Israeli-Palestinian Peace
May13
Envisioning Future Israeli-Palestinian Peace May 13
History Pub Lecture Series: "International Native American Sovereignty Activism, 1975-1980”
May13
History Pub Lecture Series: "International Native American Sovereignty Activism, 1975-1980” May 13 Whirled Pies Downtown
Jennifer James: Black Ecofeminism and Abolitionist Ecology
May14
Jennifer James: Black Ecofeminism and Abolitionist Ecology May 14 Erb Memorial Union (EMU)
Black CommUnity Table
May15
Black CommUnity Table May 15 Lyllye Reynolds-Parker Black Cultural Center
Let's Talk Drop-In - Wednesdays 2-4PM @ BCC
May15
Let's Talk Drop-In - Wednesdays 2-4PM @ BCC May 15 Lyllye Reynolds-Parker Black Cultural Center

All CAS events »