Scholarly constructions of lived experience of disability, complexities and practical implications
Representations of lived experience of disability in disability research and disability policy spaces
Building an evidence-based case for including more people with lived experience of disability in disability research and policymaking
A summary of avenues for future research relating to the question of ‘who has lived experience of disability’?
Conclusion
References
2 What does ‘good’ disability policy look like?
Introduction
Common features of disability policy
Sense checking
Building coalition
Separating the part from the whole
Knowledge mobilisation
Evaluation
Conclusion
References
3 Seeing the person before the problem: Using lived experience perspectives to eliminate restrictive practices
Introduction
The policy issue – Few lived experience perspectives inform restrictive practice policy
Restrictive practice-related disability research and policy – Participation barriers and enablers for autistic people, people with an intellectual disability and people with complex communication needs
Restrictive practice-related disability research and policy – Participation barriers and enablers for children and young people with disabilities
Co-designed research challenges and opportunities to eliminate or reduce restrictive practices – A lived experience research agenda
Conclusion
References
4 Policies to address information deprivation for people with disability
Introduction
The global prevalence of literacy: Accessible information implications for social participation and inclusion
Linguicism and social exclusion
My lived experience of linguistic and information deprivation
The role of atypical linguicism in information deprivation
Critical discussion of three dominant types of accessible information in Australia
Plain Language
Easy Read
Easy English
Summary and recommendations for future policy and research directions
References
5 Epistemic gaps and policy absences: The plight of older people living with dual sensory impairment
Introduction
Definition, context and heterogeneity
Definition
Context – Defining the policy issues around DSI and older people
Data
Heterogeneity
Impacts of DSI
Policy shortfalls and absences to support older people with DSI
International
National
Epistemic justice, injustice and types of epistemic injustice
Epistemic justice
Epistemic injustice
Types of epistemic injustice
The rise and perpetuation of epistemic wrongs
Accessibility and epistemic insights
Accessibility and its role in epistemic justice
The importance of epistemic insights
The wasteland and what lies beyond
The hermeneutical wasteland
Leaving the wasteland
A policy and research guide to building hermeneutic resources and promoting epistemic and social justice for people with DSI
Conclusion
References
6 Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease in rural Australia: A retrospective analysis of research and policy observation
Introduction
Part 1: Research project on CMT
Programme description and objectives
What is Charcot-Marie-Tooth? Epidemiology
Research project initial roll-out
Focus groups
Genetic testing disparities by remoteness index
Diagnosis aversion
Part 2: Management of chronic disease and disability in rural Australia
The ‘bush telegraph’ and its role in research
Case study 1: Rural CMT farming family
The evolving recognition of CMT in Australia
Case study 2: a rural baker’s narrative
Building awareness as a solution to bridging gaps in disability research
Future research considerations
Part 3: Government policy on disability
Tree-change
The relationship between policy and legislative instruments in New South Wales
Local government’s role in disability research
Local council disability-led policy
Better policy on state and federal levels of government
Conclusion
References
7 The lived experience of neurodivergence in academic research studies: A neuro-affirming methodology
Introduction
The language of neurodiversity and its uses
Note on language and inclusion criteria
Neurodivergent mothers and birthing people
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Autistic mothers and birthing people
Childbirth
Parenting
Insider research
Insider–outsider debate
Benefits
Drawbacks and challenges
Participatory research
Conclusion: The challenges of a PR PhD
References
8 Towards a comprehensive research agenda: Fostering disability inclusion in research and innovation at the University of Queensland
Introduction
The participatory dynamic
Status of disability research
Strategies as a response
The Plan as a response
Methodology
Data collection and collaboration
Survey
Focus groups
Data analysis
Creating the Plan
Results
Researchers and research culture
Research and innovation enabling capabilities
Research investment and cross-disciplinary collaboration
Research infrastructure, systems and precincts
Discussion and implications for research agenda.
Resulting actions from the Plan
Researchers and research culture
Research and innovation enabling capabilities
Research investment and cross-disciplinary collaboration