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Towards participation in the All Wales Strategy: Issues and processes
- Author:
- GRANT Gordon
- Publisher:
- University College of North Wales. Department of Social Theory and Institutions
- Publication year:
- 1986
- Pagination:
- 12p., bibliog.
- Place of publication:
- Bangor
Learning disability: a life cycle approach
- Editors:
- GRANT Gordon, et al, (eds.)
- Publisher:
- Open University Press
- Publication year:
- 2010
- Pagination:
- 515p.
- Place of publication:
- Maidenhead
- Edition:
- 2nd ed.
This second edition is intended for students planning to work with people with learning disabilities and severe learning disabilities at every stage of their lives. Issues surrounding the life cycle of people with learning disabilities, and their families/carers from birth, childhood and early parenting are covered. Separate sections cover: adolescence and transition to adulthood; adult identities and community inclusion; old age; and end of life. The text includes case studies and user views from service users and their families/carers. It is written for students and is also relevant for researchers, practitioners s and policy makers.
Views and experiences of people with intellectual disabilities and their families: (1) the user perspective
- Authors:
- RAMCHARAN Paul, GRANT Gordon
- Journal article citation:
- Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 14(4), 2001, pp.348-363.
- Publisher:
- Wiley
Presents a descriptive summary of the views and experiences of people with intellectual disabilities (IDs) as they have been represented in research and other literature. The authors develop further the DoH Research Initiative on Learning Disability: Proposal for a Research Review on the Views and Experiences of Users and Carers, a review report commissioned by the Department of Health on the views and experiences of users and family carers focusing on the ways in which research might contribute to policy and practice. The literature review of user views and experiences produced three broad categories: testaments of life, which are mainly ethnographies and life histories; user movement media produced in an accessible format for people with IDs or by people with IDs themselves; and research based studies in their varying forms. It is demonstrated that no single approach is able to encompass all the interests of knowledge production, policy planning, and action or practice on its own. A more coordinated and broad-based research approach to user views and experiences is advocated.
Views and experiences of people with intellectual disabilities and their families: (2) the family perspective
- Authors:
- GRANT Gordon, RAMCHARAN Paul
- Journal article citation:
- Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 14(4), 2001, pp.364-380.
- Publisher:
- Wiley
Examines findings from research into the views and experiences of families of people with intellectual disabilities (IDs). It draws from the authors' report on the views and experiences of users and carers, the DoH Research Initiative on Learning Disability: Proposal for a Research Review on the Views and Experiences of Users and Carers, which was commissioned by the Department of Health, and was intended to inform some of the thinking behind Valuing People and the associated research programme. This article traces the development and scope of research on family carers in relation to the personal and psychological experience of care as well as in relation to receipt of services. Theoretical and methodological gaps in the literature are outlined. Social systems theory is proposed as a means of addressing the requirements of a future research agenda about family care.
Supporting 'needs-led' services : implications for planning and management systems (a case study in mental handicap services)
- Authors:
- MCGRATH Morag, GRANT Gordon
- Journal article citation:
- Journal of Social Policy, 21(1), 1992, pp.71-97.
- Publisher:
- Cambridge University Press
- Place of publication:
- Cambridge
Identifies two elements of needs-led services : user participation and management delegation; uses a case study from the All Wales Strategy for services to mentally handicapped people to illustrate and discuss three models of planning and management and the implications for implementing community care.