Building Relationships in Inclusive Research in Diverse Contexts

This article explores relationships between academics and people with intellectual disabilities collaborating in inclusive research. The authors present and reflect upon narrative accounts from Norway and England from both sides of the relationship. Each relationship is examined, including how it wa...

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Main Authors: Anna Chalachanová, Melanie Nind, May Østby, Andrew Power, Liz Tilley, Jan Walmsley, Britt-Evy Westergård, Torill Heia, Alf Magne Gerhardsen, Ole Magnus Oterhals, Matthew King
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stockholm University Press 2020-05-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sjdr.se/articles/681
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spelling doaj-2dfe6b92bc664c89aeeac4713817a0d12020-11-25T03:03:18ZengStockholm University PressScandinavian Journal of Disability Research1745-30112020-05-0122110.16993/sjdr.681555Building Relationships in Inclusive Research in Diverse ContextsAnna Chalachanová0Melanie Nind1May Østby2Andrew Power3Liz Tilley4Jan Walmsley5Britt-Evy Westergård6Torill Heia7Alf Magne Gerhardsen8Ole Magnus Oterhals9Matthew King10VID Specialized UniversityUniversity of SouthamptonØstfold University College; Molde University CollegeUniversity of SouthamptonThe Open UniversityThe Open UniversityOslo Metropolitan UniversityKongsbergVID Specialized UniversityMolde University CollegeUniversity of SouthamptonThis article explores relationships between academics and people with intellectual disabilities collaborating in inclusive research. The authors present and reflect upon narrative accounts from Norway and England from both sides of the relationship. Each relationship is examined, including how it was initiated, established, developed and sustained, what worked well, what the obstacles were and how any conflicts were approached. The concept of being an ‘alongsider’, working alongside each other (and alongside participants with intellectual disabilities) is used. The paper shows variety in how alongsider relationships are initiated and fostered over time. Mostly, partnerships were initiated informally, based on pre-existing relationships as friends or through support worker-client relationship or earlier research cooperation, although one was initiated through a formal selection process. The paper concludes that when building relationships over time, the personal dimension is important, including sharing an interest, mutual respect and liking each other, while funding and tight timelines can interfere.   Accessible Summary Academics and researchers with intellectual disabilities from England and Norway wrote this article together. Academics thought up the idea and wrote the background and discussion; people with intellectual disabilities wrote about their experiences. The paper tells how we got to know each other and how we kept in touch over time. We wanted to do this because academic researchers in Norway want to do more research with people with intellectual disabilities, and need to know how to get started and keep it going. We learnt that it takes time spent alongside each other to build good research relationships, and it depends on having fun together as well as working. We learnt that the academic researcher needs to provide some support, even when there is someone else with that job. We learnt that sometimes funding and deadlines can get in the way of building strong research relationships.https://www.sjdr.se/articles/681intellectual disabilitiesinclusive researchalongsider researchresearch relationships
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Chalachanová
Melanie Nind
May Østby
Andrew Power
Liz Tilley
Jan Walmsley
Britt-Evy Westergård
Torill Heia
Alf Magne Gerhardsen
Ole Magnus Oterhals
Matthew King
spellingShingle Anna Chalachanová
Melanie Nind
May Østby
Andrew Power
Liz Tilley
Jan Walmsley
Britt-Evy Westergård
Torill Heia
Alf Magne Gerhardsen
Ole Magnus Oterhals
Matthew King
Building Relationships in Inclusive Research in Diverse Contexts
Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
intellectual disabilities
inclusive research
alongsider research
research relationships
author_facet Anna Chalachanová
Melanie Nind
May Østby
Andrew Power
Liz Tilley
Jan Walmsley
Britt-Evy Westergård
Torill Heia
Alf Magne Gerhardsen
Ole Magnus Oterhals
Matthew King
author_sort Anna Chalachanová
title Building Relationships in Inclusive Research in Diverse Contexts
title_short Building Relationships in Inclusive Research in Diverse Contexts
title_full Building Relationships in Inclusive Research in Diverse Contexts
title_fullStr Building Relationships in Inclusive Research in Diverse Contexts
title_full_unstemmed Building Relationships in Inclusive Research in Diverse Contexts
title_sort building relationships in inclusive research in diverse contexts
publisher Stockholm University Press
series Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
issn 1745-3011
publishDate 2020-05-01
description This article explores relationships between academics and people with intellectual disabilities collaborating in inclusive research. The authors present and reflect upon narrative accounts from Norway and England from both sides of the relationship. Each relationship is examined, including how it was initiated, established, developed and sustained, what worked well, what the obstacles were and how any conflicts were approached. The concept of being an ‘alongsider’, working alongside each other (and alongside participants with intellectual disabilities) is used. The paper shows variety in how alongsider relationships are initiated and fostered over time. Mostly, partnerships were initiated informally, based on pre-existing relationships as friends or through support worker-client relationship or earlier research cooperation, although one was initiated through a formal selection process. The paper concludes that when building relationships over time, the personal dimension is important, including sharing an interest, mutual respect and liking each other, while funding and tight timelines can interfere.   Accessible Summary Academics and researchers with intellectual disabilities from England and Norway wrote this article together. Academics thought up the idea and wrote the background and discussion; people with intellectual disabilities wrote about their experiences. The paper tells how we got to know each other and how we kept in touch over time. We wanted to do this because academic researchers in Norway want to do more research with people with intellectual disabilities, and need to know how to get started and keep it going. We learnt that it takes time spent alongside each other to build good research relationships, and it depends on having fun together as well as working. We learnt that the academic researcher needs to provide some support, even when there is someone else with that job. We learnt that sometimes funding and deadlines can get in the way of building strong research relationships.
topic intellectual disabilities
inclusive research
alongsider research
research relationships
url https://www.sjdr.se/articles/681
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