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Inclusion in political and public life: the experiences of people with intellectual disability on government disability advisory bodies in Australia
- Authors:
- FRAWLEY Patsie, BIGBY Christine
- Journal article citation:
- Journal of Intellectual and Developmental Disability, 36(1), March 2011, pp.27-38.
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis
In the last decade, Australian governments have used disability advisory bodies as a means to canvass the views of people with disability and involve them in the process of policy making. This study explored the political orientations that members with an intellectual disability bring to disability advisory bodies and their experience of participating, in order to consider the types of support necessary to facilitate their participation. The 9 main participants were the only people with an intellectual disability who were members of disability advisory bodies in Australia in 2005. 2 or more in-depth interviews were conducted with each of them. 12 people associated with the participants' membership of the advisory body, including support workers and other members, were also interviewed. 3 political orientations were identified: democratic orientation (participation as a right), professional orientation (participation as a status symbol) and communitarian orientation (participation as the role of a community member). The participants found the work hard but rewarding, encountered both practical and intangible obstacles to participation, and received varying types of support. The article discusses the findings, with examples from the interviews, including experiences of participation, challenges and types of participation support.
Beset by obstacles: a review of Australian policy development to support ageing in place for people with intellectual disability
- Author:
- BIGBY Christine
- Journal article citation:
- Journal of Intellectual and Developmental Disability, 33(1), March 2008, pp.76-86.
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis
Australian government policy regards people with intellectual disability (ID) as citizens with equal rights, which means that they should have access to the same opportunities as the wider community. Ageing in place is central to aged care policy in Australia for the general population. This paper reviews policy to support the provision of similar opportunities to age in place for people with ID, and the reasons for its slow development. Due to lifestyle patterns earlier in the life course, many people with ID experience a mid-life disruption to their accommodation, and may live in a group home as they age or may move prematurely to residential aged care. The absence of mechanisms to adjust disability funding as needs change, and the existence of policy that denies residents in group homes access to community-based aged care, forces disability services to “go it alone” to support ageing in place. Despite a national priority to improve the interface between the disability and aged care sectors, administrative and funding characteristics continue to obstruct the development of implementation strategies to support ageing in place for people with ID, which remain at the stage of an exploration of the issues.