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dc.contributor.authorClegg, Jennifer
dc.date.accessioned2017-09-20T16:01:28Z
dc.date.available2017-09-20T16:01:28Z
dc.date.issued2008
dc.identifier.citationClegg, J., Murphy, E., Almack, K. & Harvey, A. (2008). Tensions around inclusion: Reframing the moral horizon. Journal of Applied Research In Intellectual Disabilities, 21 (1), pp.81-94.
dc.identifier.other10.1111/j.1468-3148.2007.00371.x
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/10500
dc.description.abstractBackground Inclusion is one of four policies for people with disabilities in the UK. Criticisms of its three key attributes - mainstreaming, independent living and employment - are reviewed. Methods This study of 28 young people, most with severe intellectual disabilities, investigated engagement with inclusion at their transition to adult services. Data were collected from the young people where possible; from their carers, mostly parents; and from professionals responsible for brokering transition. Narrative analysis of this material investigated ways in which respondents did or did not engage with the goals of inclusion as defined in various policy documents. Results Both mainstreaming and independent living were experienced as moral imperatives which generated tension for many respondents. Employment was associated with less tension, probably because only a minority of respondents considered it salient. Possible alternative goals invoked by parents/carers and professionals were meaningful activity and same-age social relationships. Conclusions. There is a need to acknowledge the moral pressures and judgements arising from inclusion policy that complicate decision-making at transition and to shift the moral horizon away from individual attainments and towards the activities and relationships that take people beyond themselves.
dc.description.urihttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1468-3148.2007.00371.x/abstract
dc.subjectIntellectual disability
dc.titleTensions around inclusion: Reframing the moral horizon
dc.typeArticle
html.description.abstractBackground Inclusion is one of four policies for people with disabilities in the UK. Criticisms of its three key attributes - mainstreaming, independent living and employment - are reviewed. Methods This study of 28 young people, most with severe intellectual disabilities, investigated engagement with inclusion at their transition to adult services. Data were collected from the young people where possible; from their carers, mostly parents; and from professionals responsible for brokering transition. Narrative analysis of this material investigated ways in which respondents did or did not engage with the goals of inclusion as defined in various policy documents. Results Both mainstreaming and independent living were experienced as moral imperatives which generated tension for many respondents. Employment was associated with less tension, probably because only a minority of respondents considered it salient. Possible alternative goals invoked by parents/carers and professionals were meaningful activity and same-age social relationships. Conclusions. There is a need to acknowledge the moral pressures and judgements arising from inclusion policy that complicate decision-making at transition and to shift the moral horizon away from individual attainments and towards the activities and relationships that take people beyond themselves.


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