1st Edition

Valuing Disabled Children and Young People Research, policy, and practice

Edited By Berni Kelly, Bronagh Byrne Copyright 2017
    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    Focusing on contemporary childhood disability issues, and relevant to the lived experiences of disabled children and young people and their families, this book addresses themes such as transition, identity, education, inclusion, and service provision. It also includes insightful contributions on participatory research and practice with disabled children and young people, including an emphasis on capability, voice, and communicative spaces for those with life limiting and more severe levels of impairment.

    The contributions to this book are grounded in a commitment to the rights of disabled children and young people, as explicitly recognised under the United Nations Conventions on the Rights of the Child (1989) and Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2006). However, the authors also draw our attention to the detrimental impact of economic austerity and conflict on the extent to which these rights are being realised, encouraging further consideration of issues relating to social justice, inter-dependence, and participation. Addressing the diversity of disabled children’s lives across service domains and international contexts, this book provides an evidence base to support the realisation of the rights of disabled children and young people. This book was originally published as a special issue of Child Care in Practice.

    Introduction: Valuing Disabled Children Bronagh Byrne and Berni Kelly

    1. "We Could Kid On that This is Going to Benefit the Kids but No, This is about Funding": Cutbacks in Services to Disabled Children and Young People in Scotland Kirsten Stalker, Charlotte MacDonald, Caroline King, Francis McFaul, Colin Young and Moyra Hawthorn

    2. Prioritising the Inclusion of Children and Young People with Disabilities in Post-conflict Education Reform Rebecca Irvine

    3. "The Things that are Inside of You are Horrible": Children and Young Men with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Talk about the Impact of Living with a Long-term Condition David Abbott and John Carpenter

    4. To be Cared For and to Care: Understanding Theoretical Conceptions of Care as a Framework for Effective Inclusion in Early Childhood Education and Care Rebecca Wood

    5. Valuing the Place of Young People with Learning Disabilities in the Arts Jennifer Goddard

    6. The Participation of Disabled Children and Young People: A Social Justice Perspective Patricia McNeilly, Geraldine Macdonald and Berni Kelly

    7. Understanding Young Children’s Capabilities: Approaches to Interviews with Young Children Experiencing Disability Kathryn Underwood, Cherry Chan, Donna Koller and Angela Valeo

    8. From Individualism to Co-construction and Back Again: Rethinking Research Methodology for Children with Profound and Multiple Learning Disabilities Ben Simmons and Debbie Watson

    9. Narrativising Envisioned Futures by Adolescents with Significant Intellectual Disabilities Kagendo Mutua and Beth Blue Swadener

    10. Transition, Inclusion and Partnership: Child-, Parent- and Professional-led Approaches in a European Research Project John M. Davis, John Ravenscroft and Nik Bizas

    11. Exploring Transitions with Disabled Young People: Our experiences, Our Rights and Our Views Aidan Rome, Jessica Hardy, Jamie Richardson and Felicity Shenton

    12. "Yes They are Listening but Do They Hear Us?" Reflections on the Journey of the Barnardo’s Participation Project Rosemary Murray

    Biography

    Berni Kelly is a Senior Lecturer in Social Work at Queen’s University Belfast, UK. Her main research interests are child and youth disability studies, participatory disability research, and transitions to adult life. She is currently working on studies of disabled children and young people living in, and leaving, public care. She is co-chair of the Disability Research Network at Queen’s University Belfast.

    Bronagh Byrne is Lecturer in Social Policy at Queen’s University Belfast. Her key research interests are in disability and children’s rights, education, and transitions. She has worked on a number of studies examining the application of international human rights law to policy and practice. She is co-chair of the Disability Research Network at Queen’s University Belfast.