The Right to Be Freepeople: Relational Voluntary-Assisted-Advocacy as a Psychological and Ethical Resource for Decolonizing Intellectual Disability

Participating in social activism implies responsibility for its exchange and creation. We focus on Intellectual Disability (ID) as an advocacy site for individuals who are dependent on assistance with activities of daily life, and attend to the process of taking care during social justice projects....

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Main Authors: Charlotte Capri, Leslie Swartz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2018-12-01
Series:Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/946
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spelling doaj-7a196e19be2b453bbe8ebba9ba6633272020-11-25T03:43:17ZengPsychOpenJournal of Social and Political Psychology2195-33252018-12-016255657410.5964/jspp.v6i2.946jspp.v6i2.946The Right to Be Freepeople: Relational Voluntary-Assisted-Advocacy as a Psychological and Ethical Resource for Decolonizing Intellectual DisabilityCharlotte Capri0Leslie Swartz1Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South AfricaDepartment of Psychology, University of Stellenbosch, Stellenbosch, South AfricaParticipating in social activism implies responsibility for its exchange and creation. We focus on Intellectual Disability (ID) as an advocacy site for individuals who are dependent on assistance with activities of daily life, and attend to the process of taking care during social justice projects. Our paper responds to current South African social justice controversies perpetrated against people who may be unable to independently mobilize against increasingly othering – even deadly – socio-political conditions. Underpinned by relational Ethics of Care, voluntary-assisted-advocacy can be a psychologically relational, intersubjective, and societal project that strives for ID citizenship-making and social justice. This paper draws on numerous interviews and a number of ethnographic observations in exploration of ID care. Empirical material was subjected to thematic content analysis, and participant quotes bring our argument to life. Relationships among people with Intellectual Disability (PWID) and non-ID assistant-advocates are asymmetrical. We can either uphold dominant non-ID voices, or transform socio-political ruling relations that maintain dependence on conditions of power and inequality. Our contributions to the advocacy we co-create today will shape the activism we will depend on in the future. We consider relational voluntary-assisted-advocacy as a psychological and ethical resource for sustainable, mutually satisfying social change.http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/946Intellectual Disabilityrelational psychologysocial activismvoluntary-assisted-advocacyrights crisesSouth Africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charlotte Capri
Leslie Swartz
spellingShingle Charlotte Capri
Leslie Swartz
The Right to Be Freepeople: Relational Voluntary-Assisted-Advocacy as a Psychological and Ethical Resource for Decolonizing Intellectual Disability
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Intellectual Disability
relational psychology
social activism
voluntary-assisted-advocacy
rights crises
South Africa
author_facet Charlotte Capri
Leslie Swartz
author_sort Charlotte Capri
title The Right to Be Freepeople: Relational Voluntary-Assisted-Advocacy as a Psychological and Ethical Resource for Decolonizing Intellectual Disability
title_short The Right to Be Freepeople: Relational Voluntary-Assisted-Advocacy as a Psychological and Ethical Resource for Decolonizing Intellectual Disability
title_full The Right to Be Freepeople: Relational Voluntary-Assisted-Advocacy as a Psychological and Ethical Resource for Decolonizing Intellectual Disability
title_fullStr The Right to Be Freepeople: Relational Voluntary-Assisted-Advocacy as a Psychological and Ethical Resource for Decolonizing Intellectual Disability
title_full_unstemmed The Right to Be Freepeople: Relational Voluntary-Assisted-Advocacy as a Psychological and Ethical Resource for Decolonizing Intellectual Disability
title_sort right to be freepeople: relational voluntary-assisted-advocacy as a psychological and ethical resource for decolonizing intellectual disability
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Social and Political Psychology
issn 2195-3325
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Participating in social activism implies responsibility for its exchange and creation. We focus on Intellectual Disability (ID) as an advocacy site for individuals who are dependent on assistance with activities of daily life, and attend to the process of taking care during social justice projects. Our paper responds to current South African social justice controversies perpetrated against people who may be unable to independently mobilize against increasingly othering – even deadly – socio-political conditions. Underpinned by relational Ethics of Care, voluntary-assisted-advocacy can be a psychologically relational, intersubjective, and societal project that strives for ID citizenship-making and social justice. This paper draws on numerous interviews and a number of ethnographic observations in exploration of ID care. Empirical material was subjected to thematic content analysis, and participant quotes bring our argument to life. Relationships among people with Intellectual Disability (PWID) and non-ID assistant-advocates are asymmetrical. We can either uphold dominant non-ID voices, or transform socio-political ruling relations that maintain dependence on conditions of power and inequality. Our contributions to the advocacy we co-create today will shape the activism we will depend on in the future. We consider relational voluntary-assisted-advocacy as a psychological and ethical resource for sustainable, mutually satisfying social change.
topic Intellectual Disability
relational psychology
social activism
voluntary-assisted-advocacy
rights crises
South Africa
url http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/946
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