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Intellectual disability and being human: a care ethics modelRogers, Chrissie January 2016 (has links)
No / This pioneering book, in considering intellectually disabled people's lives, sets out a care ethics model of disability that outlines the emotional caring sphere, where love and care are psycho-socially questioned, the practical caring sphere, where day-to-day care is carried out, and the socio-political caring sphere, where social intolerance and aversion to difficult differences are addressed. It does so by discussing issue-based everyday life, such as family, relationships, media representations and education, in an evocative and creative manner. This book draws from an understanding of how intellectual disability is represented in all forms of media, a feminist ethics of care, and capabilities, as well as other theories, to provide a critique and alternative to the social model of disability as well as illuminate care-less spaces that inhabit all the caring spheres.
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Life Stories, Criminal Justice and Caring ResearchRogers, Chrissie 07 1900 (has links)
Yes / In the context of offenders who have learning difficulties, autism and/or social,
emotional and mental health problems, their families, and professionals who work with them,
I explore caring and ethical research processes via fieldnotes I wrote while carrying out lifestory
interviews. Life-story interviews and recording fieldnotes within qualitative
criminological, education and sociological research have long since been used to document and
analyse communities, institutions and everyday life in the private and public spheres. They
richly tell us about specific contexts, research relationships and emotional responses to data
collection that interview transcripts alone overlook. It is in the process of recording and
reflecting upon research relationships that we can see and understand ‘care-full’ research. But
caring and ethical research works in an interdependent and relational way. Therefore, the
participant and the researcher are at times vulnerable, and recognition of such is critical in
considering meaningful and healthy research practices. However, the acknowledgment that
particular types of data collection can be messy, chaotic and emotional is necessary in
understanding caring research. / The Leverhulme Trust (RF-2016-613\8).
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