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Personalisation policy in the lives of people with learning disabilities: a call to focus on how people build their lives relationally

Personalisation policy in the lives of people with learning disabilities: a call to focus on how people build their lives relationally
Personalisation policy in the lives of people with learning disabilities: a call to focus on how people build their lives relationally
Social care provision across high-income countries has been transformed over the last ten years by personalisation – a policy agenda to give people with eligible support needs more choice and control over their support. Yet the ideological underpinnings of this transformation remain highly mutable, particularly in the context of reduced welfare provision that has unfolded in many nations advancing personalisation. How the policy has manifested itself has led to an expectation for people to self-build a life as individual consumers within a care market. This paper draws on a study exploring how people with learning disabilities in England and Scotland are responding to the everyday realities of personalisation as it is enacted where they live and show the relationality inherent in their practices. We propose that the personalisation agenda as it currently stands (as an individualising movement involving an increasing responsibilisation of individuals and their families) ignores the inherently relational nature of care and support. We propose that social care policy needs to recognise the relational ways in which people build their lives and to advocate a redistribution of responsibility to reduce inequalities in the allocation of care.
austerity, intellectual disability, social care, relationality, personalisation
0261-0183
1
Power, Andrew
b3a1ee09-e381-413a-88ac-7cb3e13b3acc
Coverdale, Andy
27ac1a1c-5502-4ee3-b0e2-fc9226ff7b22
Croydon, Abigail
Hall, Edward
56ae29cb-2dd6-420b-9834-344d49a1ed6a
Kaley, Alex
9cd1a272-42f2-4801-9ab9-38f2febba2e9
Macpherson, Hannah
76b05dd6-a5a8-4aaf-b9b3-645f2acc857a
Nind, Melanie
b1e294c7-0014-483e-9320-e2a0346dffef
Power, Andrew
b3a1ee09-e381-413a-88ac-7cb3e13b3acc
Coverdale, Andy
27ac1a1c-5502-4ee3-b0e2-fc9226ff7b22
Croydon, Abigail
Hall, Edward
56ae29cb-2dd6-420b-9834-344d49a1ed6a
Kaley, Alex
9cd1a272-42f2-4801-9ab9-38f2febba2e9
Macpherson, Hannah
76b05dd6-a5a8-4aaf-b9b3-645f2acc857a
Nind, Melanie
b1e294c7-0014-483e-9320-e2a0346dffef

Power, Andrew, Coverdale, Andy, Croydon, Abigail, Hall, Edward, Kaley, Alex, Macpherson, Hannah and Nind, Melanie (2021) Personalisation policy in the lives of people with learning disabilities: a call to focus on how people build their lives relationally. Critical Social Policy, 1. (doi:10.1177/02610183211004534).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Social care provision across high-income countries has been transformed over the last ten years by personalisation – a policy agenda to give people with eligible support needs more choice and control over their support. Yet the ideological underpinnings of this transformation remain highly mutable, particularly in the context of reduced welfare provision that has unfolded in many nations advancing personalisation. How the policy has manifested itself has led to an expectation for people to self-build a life as individual consumers within a care market. This paper draws on a study exploring how people with learning disabilities in England and Scotland are responding to the everyday realities of personalisation as it is enacted where they live and show the relationality inherent in their practices. We propose that the personalisation agenda as it currently stands (as an individualising movement involving an increasing responsibilisation of individuals and their families) ignores the inherently relational nature of care and support. We propose that social care policy needs to recognise the relational ways in which people build their lives and to advocate a redistribution of responsibility to reduce inequalities in the allocation of care.

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 February 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 March 2021
Published date: 25 March 2021
Keywords: austerity, intellectual disability, social care, relationality, personalisation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 447921
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/447921
ISSN: 0261-0183
PURE UUID: 8b4b11a7-79d7-4db0-b51d-731702db6d3f
ORCID for Andrew Power: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3887-1050
ORCID for Andy Coverdale: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6912-5942
ORCID for Melanie Nind: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4070-7513

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Date deposited: 26 Mar 2021 17:30
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:48

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Power ORCID iD
Author: Andy Coverdale ORCID iD
Author: Abigail Croydon
Author: Edward Hall
Author: Alex Kaley
Author: Hannah Macpherson
Author: Melanie Nind ORCID iD

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