In 1999 we began research, funded by the ‘Thomas Pocklington Trust’, to explore the opinions of visually impaired people on visual impairment research. We found people wanted greater inclusion of visually impaired people in such research and participatory, empowering and emancipatory research was a priority for them. We also found, through reviewing the academic literature, that there was a dearth of such work in the field. In this article we revisit the topic to review research that has or has not been conducted since our first study to see if there has been a change in the use of emancipatory methods in the field. We have contextualized our review in a discussion on the field of disability studies and the international social policy conte...
The research described in this thesis had two main aims. First, to examine the concept of citizenshi...
The purpose of the study was to learn how social structures can enable accessibility, by asking pers...
textabstractThe ideology of Emancipatory Disability Research (EDR) reflected in the phrase ‘Nothing ...
This paper addresses the debate surrounding the participatory & emancipatory approach in disability ...
In this paper I will attempt to provide a historical and contemporary framework for discussions abou...
In this paper, we describe our research review, commissioned by 'the Gift of Thomas Pocklington', in...
on visual impairment to be included on a large web site for social workers (see www.be-evidence-base...
Social Research and Disability argues that the contemporary rules of sociological methods outlined i...
The social model of disability requires that research about disability should be controlled and mana...
This anthropological research is about people with visual impairment, focusing primarily through the...
The research described in this thesis had two main aims. First, to examine the concept of citizenshi...
In this paper I consider recent debates in disability studies concerning how disability research sho...
This article reviews and re-evaluates a qualitative research project carried out in England in the l...
This thesis looks at social scientific and disability related research on visual impairment and educ...
Important methodological questions are raised by the act of researching disablement. Disability rese...
The research described in this thesis had two main aims. First, to examine the concept of citizenshi...
The purpose of the study was to learn how social structures can enable accessibility, by asking pers...
textabstractThe ideology of Emancipatory Disability Research (EDR) reflected in the phrase ‘Nothing ...
This paper addresses the debate surrounding the participatory & emancipatory approach in disability ...
In this paper I will attempt to provide a historical and contemporary framework for discussions abou...
In this paper, we describe our research review, commissioned by 'the Gift of Thomas Pocklington', in...
on visual impairment to be included on a large web site for social workers (see www.be-evidence-base...
Social Research and Disability argues that the contemporary rules of sociological methods outlined i...
The social model of disability requires that research about disability should be controlled and mana...
This anthropological research is about people with visual impairment, focusing primarily through the...
The research described in this thesis had two main aims. First, to examine the concept of citizenshi...
In this paper I consider recent debates in disability studies concerning how disability research sho...
This article reviews and re-evaluates a qualitative research project carried out in England in the l...
This thesis looks at social scientific and disability related research on visual impairment and educ...
Important methodological questions are raised by the act of researching disablement. Disability rese...
The research described in this thesis had two main aims. First, to examine the concept of citizenshi...
The purpose of the study was to learn how social structures can enable accessibility, by asking pers...
textabstractThe ideology of Emancipatory Disability Research (EDR) reflected in the phrase ‘Nothing ...