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Inclusive Research with People with Learning Disabilities: Past, Present and Futures [Paperback / softback]

  • Format: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, height x width x depth: 232x154x14 mm, weight: 401 g
  • Pub. Date: 19-Mar-2003
  • Publisher: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1843100614
  • ISBN-13: 9781843100614
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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, height x width x depth: 232x154x14 mm, weight: 401 g
  • Pub. Date: 19-Mar-2003
  • Publisher: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1843100614
  • ISBN-13: 9781843100614
Other books in subject:
In this thought-provoking book, Jan Walmsley and Kelley Johnson discuss participative approaches to research and provide an up-to-date account of inclusive practice with individuals with learning disabilities. Drawing on evidence from two major studies, they explain how lessons learnt from inclusive research in the learning disability field are applicable to others working with marginalized groups. The authors examine the origins and the process of inclusive research, describing:

* how and why it takes place

* who carries it out

* who funds it

* how it is designed

* how it relates to policy and practice.

They look at the challenges inherent in this work, such as balancing the voice of the researcher with that of disabled participants and clarifying roles within research projects, and explore how it can become more inclusive and empowering. Providing valuable information and advice to researchers, policy makers and students as well as other health and social care professionals, this book presents a comprehensive examination of participative research in social care.

Reviews

Walmsley and Johnson have presented us with an excellent book in Inclusive Research with People with Learning Disabilities. As the full title suggests, this book explores the past, present and futures of inclusive research with people with learning disabilities. This is done well.

I found this book both intriguing and enjoyable. It is full of insight, fact and reference, and is written in a clear and illuminating style. In many places throughout this well-ordered text examples are usefully employed to highlight the discussion. Without a doubt, I think that this book is a timely addition to the area. It fills a gap in the literature and is clearly and authoritatively written. In my view it should be essential reading for anyone concerned with the lives of people with learning disabilities. -- British Journal Of Social Work This is a fascinating book, partly because of it's subject matter, partly because the very ambivalence it identifies among inclusive researchers is painfully played out on its pages. The authors aim to record, review and celebrate the achievements of inclusive research, but also to tackle the current `stifling' of debate about the very real challenges of involving people with learning disabilities in the research process. -- Social Policy Policy makers, researchers, practitioners and students should find in this reader some thought-provoking and authoritative information and advice on how to carry out truly inclusive research with people with learning disabilities. -- Care & Health Magazine Far more than a "how to do it" handbook. The pages are filled with thought-provoking suggestions, and nothing is taken for granted. The book was inspired by "questions we dared not ask", as the authors confess, and it does indeed consider a range of sensitive issues about power, ownership, initiation and value. -- Community Care

Acknowledgements 7(2)
Introduction: Reputable? Helpful? ... and inclusive? 9(12)
PART 1: DESCRIBING THE PAST 21(72)
1 Of Shoes and Ships and Sealing Wax and... Inclusive Research: Or Where Did It All Start?
23(21)
2 Normalizing, Emancipating and Making a Stand
44(17)
3 Inclusive Research in Learning Disability: Beginnings
61(18)
4 Knowing the Elephant
79(14)
PART 2: EXPLORING THE RESEARCH PROCESS 93(96)
5 Nothing About Us Without Us: Good Times Bad Times
95(14)
6 Living Safer Sexual Lives: Making Research Work
109(17)
7 What Matters to People with Learning Disabilities?
126(20)
8 Managing Inclusive Research
146(18)
9 Who Uses it and How?
164(19)
10 What Has Been Achieved?
183(6)
PART 3: BEYOND RHETORIC TO NEW REALITIES 189(31)
11 Beyond Rhetoric...
191(16)
12 ... To New Realities
207(13)
Conclusion: Why Do It? 220(4)
References 224(20)
Subject index 244(9)
Author index 253(1)
Author index 253
092445783X
Introduction 15(10)
Chapter 1: Planets 25(18)
Four fundamental elements expressed by the planets; the internal energy-intelligence of the celestial bodies and their relationship to Man; the Force as the primal life flow divided into ten Sfirot; the contributions of the patriarch Abraham and Rabbi Isaac Luria toward our understanding of the purpose and influences of the planets.
Chapter 2: The Frontiers of Space 43(6)
A comprehensive road map and knowledge provide the connection to control of our life.
Chapter 3: The Invisible Cosmos 49(14)
The physicists' quantum picture of the universe; the background-figure illusion and its implications; the physicists' fruitless search for the quantum reality; the Divine word of infinity transformed into finite language by the Kabbalist.
Chapter 4: Waves and Particles 63(32)
The question of causality in classical physics and Kabbalah; Rabbi Ashlag's contributions to the study of nature's laws; is the Universe expanding? Matter and anti-matter; the creative process according to Kabbalah; the effect of man's thought and the Encircling Light; parallel universes.
Chapter 5: The Expanding Inner Universe 95(42)
The necessity of gaining knowledge of existence; theories developed by science, areas of uncertainty and areas of understanding; the approach of the Zohar; the nature of Light; the spiritual nature of matter; the two levels of consciousness of mankind; man as the director of movement in the universe; the unified principle of wave consciousness and the fragmented principle of particle consciousness.
Chapter 6: The Language of Kabbalah 137(28)
The common language at the beginning; the language of the Bible; the development of language; the language of the Decalogue; the Zohar's clarification of the language of the Bible; the relationship of language to the Revelation on Mount Sinai.
Chapter 7: Prayer 165(38)
Man's role as master of his destiny and controller of universal activity; prayer as a ladder to connect to the celestial realm; in prayer with Kavannah the Kabbalist dwells in the realm of Divine forces; the opinions of Shammai and Hillel; transcending the corporeal realm of opposites; a discourse in the Zohar on the significance of prayer; an examination of the Tetragrammaton, and other Holy Names; the concept of Tshuvah.
References 203(6)
Index 209


Jan Walmsley is a Senior Lecturer at the Open University School of Health and Social Welfare in Milton Keynes. Kelley Johnson is Professor of Disability, Policy and Practice at the University of Bristol, and Director of the Norah Fry Research Centre and together with Rannveig Traustadottir, edited Women with Intellectual Disabilities for Jessica Kingsley Publishers.