Disability and social inclusion ‘Down Under’: A systematic literature review
This article provides a systematic literature review investigating how the social inclusion of adults with disability is conceptualised in research concerned with policy and service provision in Australia. The review will summarise this literature, and clarify its relative strengths and weaknesses....
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2017-12-01
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Series: | Journal of Social Inclusion |
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doaj-b17840ac140240d6bbceebab968e81dd2020-11-25T03:41:06ZengGriffith UniversityJournal of Social Inclusion1836-88082017-12-0182526702Disability and social inclusion ‘Down Under’: A systematic literature reviewPiers Gooding0Julie Anderson1Keith McVilly2Dr Gooding is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Melbourne Social Equity Institute and the Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne.University of MelbourneUniversity of MelbourneThis article provides a systematic literature review investigating how the social inclusion of adults with disability is conceptualised in research concerned with policy and service provision in Australia. The review will summarise this literature, and clarify its relative strengths and weaknesses. The findings from the literature review are grouped into recurring themes, namely: deinstitutionalisation; the changing nature of paid support; different forms of ‘community engagement’; and socially valued roles, particularly in the realms of employment, volunteering, and consumer transactions. The literature mostly concerns people with intellectual and cognitive disability, more so than persons with sensory, psychosocial (mental health) and physical disabilities. Several gaps emerge in the literature, such as the experiences of Indigenous people with disabilities, both in terms of exclusion they may face, and solutions being developed by Indigenous communities; ambiguous understandings of social inclusion; and a lack of acknowledgement of prominent critiques of social inclusion. The review builds on these findings to make recommendations for policy, practice, and further research.https://josi.org.au/articles/abstract/10.36251/josi.121/ |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Piers Gooding Julie Anderson Keith McVilly |
spellingShingle |
Piers Gooding Julie Anderson Keith McVilly Disability and social inclusion ‘Down Under’: A systematic literature review Journal of Social Inclusion |
author_facet |
Piers Gooding Julie Anderson Keith McVilly |
author_sort |
Piers Gooding |
title |
Disability and social inclusion ‘Down Under’: A systematic literature review |
title_short |
Disability and social inclusion ‘Down Under’: A systematic literature review |
title_full |
Disability and social inclusion ‘Down Under’: A systematic literature review |
title_fullStr |
Disability and social inclusion ‘Down Under’: A systematic literature review |
title_full_unstemmed |
Disability and social inclusion ‘Down Under’: A systematic literature review |
title_sort |
disability and social inclusion ‘down under’: a systematic literature review |
publisher |
Griffith University |
series |
Journal of Social Inclusion |
issn |
1836-8808 |
publishDate |
2017-12-01 |
description |
This article provides a systematic literature review investigating how the social inclusion of adults with disability is conceptualised in research concerned with policy and service provision in Australia. The review will summarise this literature, and clarify its relative strengths and weaknesses. The findings from the literature review are grouped into recurring themes, namely: deinstitutionalisation; the changing nature of paid support; different forms of ‘community engagement’; and socially valued roles, particularly in the realms of employment, volunteering, and consumer transactions. The literature mostly concerns people with intellectual and cognitive disability, more so than persons with sensory, psychosocial (mental health) and physical disabilities. Several gaps emerge in the literature, such as the experiences of Indigenous people with disabilities, both in terms of exclusion they may face, and solutions being developed by Indigenous communities; ambiguous understandings of social inclusion; and a lack of acknowledgement of prominent critiques of social inclusion. The review builds on these findings to make recommendations for policy, practice, and further research. |
url |
https://josi.org.au/articles/abstract/10.36251/josi.121/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT piersgooding disabilityandsocialinclusiondownunderasystematicliteraturereview AT julieanderson disabilityandsocialinclusiondownunderasystematicliteraturereview AT keithmcvilly disabilityandsocialinclusiondownunderasystematicliteraturereview |
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