Name Tom Shakespeare Role Shakespeare baronets | Coronation date 1996 | |
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Books Disability Rights and Wrongs, Disability Rights and Wrongs R, Exploring Disability, The Disability Reader, Help |
Disability and sexuality sub ita tom shakespeare
Sir Thomas William Shakespeare, 3rd Baronet (born 11 May 1966), better known as Tom Shakespeare, is an English sociologist and broadcaster. He has achondroplasia and uses a wheelchair.
Contents
- Disability and sexuality sub ita tom shakespeare
- Dr tom shakespeare labels and badges diagnosis identity
- Early life
- Career
- Personal life
- References

Dr tom shakespeare labels and badges diagnosis identity
Early life

A member of the Shakespeare family, his grandfather, Sir Geoffrey Shakespeare, was made a baronet following long service as a Member of Parliament and in various senior government roles. While still a student, he was featured in a television documentary by Lord Snowdon connected to his 1976 report 'Integrating the Disabled' about his restricted growth, along with his father, Sir William Geoffrey Shakespeare, a prominent medical practitioner.

Shakespeare was educated at Radley College, Oxfordshire, taking A-levels in English, History, and History of Art; and Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he matriculated in 1984 to read Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic. He gained a MPhil degree from King's College, Cambridge, in 1991.
Career

Shakespeare then lectured in sociology at the University of Sunderland from 1993 and returned to King's College in 1995 to obtain his PhD degree. His father died in 1996 and Shakespeare inherited his baronetcy, but does not use the title. He is also a campaigner for disability rights, a writer on disability, genetics and bio-ethics and was the co-author of The Sexual Politics of Disability (1996; ISBN 0-304-33329-8).

He studied political science at Cambridge University. As a radical student, he supported liberation movements such as feminism, anti-racism and lesbian and gay rights. During his MPhil, he wrote a book about the politics of disability. He also wrote the book Disability Rights and Wrongs published by Routledge in 2006 and edited Arguing About Disability published in 2009 by Routledge.
He has worked as a research fellow at both Newcastle University and Leeds University, and has worked for the World Health Organization in Geneva. He served as a member of the Arts Council of England between 2003 and 2008. He has presented programmes on BBC Radio 4, including A Point of View.
Tom Shakespeare is currently Professor of Disability Research in the medical faculty at the University of East Anglia and a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics.
Personal life
In 2002 Shakespeare married dancer and disability rights campaigner Caroline Bowditch. They have a son, Robert, and daughter, Ivy. Shakespeare was a member of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in 2009. By 2010 he had split with his wife and he lived in Geneva with his partner, Alana. In 2016, he featured on the ITV show 500 Questions winning £14,000 by answering 42 out of 50 questions. He received a standing ovation for his efforts.