This article explores tensions between the policies and practice of inclusion and the lived experiences of disabled young people in education. Drawing on the narratives of two young men who participated in a small pilot study, it utilises theoretical concepts related to disability, structure and agency, and power and control, as it explores the ways in which inclusion can create subtle (and sometimes not so subtle) forms of exclusion. Focusing on the young men's experiences of further and higher education, it is argued that inclusive practices and policies, however well intentioned, can create new and subtle forms of marginalisation through the structures and discourse intended to address exclusion. I conclude by questioning whether, in a d...
In this piece, we argue that universities and by extension all educational establishments need to ad...
In our contribution we investigate firstly the general discussion on inclusion in education that had...
Disabled students are accessing higher education in increasing numbers, but this I argue does not ne...
This article explores tensions between the policies and practice of inclusion and the lived experien...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
Inclusive practice is well embedded across society and has developed over time. However, although po...
Abstract: This article draws on a review of literature on inclusion taking into account the differen...
This thesis explores hidden disability and higher education through the perspective of New Materiali...
peer reviewedAbstract: This article draws on a review of literature on inclusion taking into account...
In this article the tripartite model of disability is applied to the lived experience of twenty-firs...
Inclusion is usually defined “as a student with an identified disability, spending greater than 80% ...
The promotion of inclusive education has become a focus of international debate. Research which has ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
In this reflective piece the author focuses on the meaning that he made of inclusion in a book that ...
In this piece, we argue that universities and by extension all educational establishments need to ad...
In our contribution we investigate firstly the general discussion on inclusion in education that had...
Disabled students are accessing higher education in increasing numbers, but this I argue does not ne...
This article explores tensions between the policies and practice of inclusion and the lived experien...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
Inclusive practice is well embedded across society and has developed over time. However, although po...
Abstract: This article draws on a review of literature on inclusion taking into account the differen...
This thesis explores hidden disability and higher education through the perspective of New Materiali...
peer reviewedAbstract: This article draws on a review of literature on inclusion taking into account...
In this article the tripartite model of disability is applied to the lived experience of twenty-firs...
Inclusion is usually defined “as a student with an identified disability, spending greater than 80% ...
The promotion of inclusive education has become a focus of international debate. Research which has ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
In this reflective piece the author focuses on the meaning that he made of inclusion in a book that ...
In this piece, we argue that universities and by extension all educational establishments need to ad...
In our contribution we investigate firstly the general discussion on inclusion in education that had...
Disabled students are accessing higher education in increasing numbers, but this I argue does not ne...