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Researching belonging with people with learning disabilities: self-building active community lives in the context of personalisation

Researching belonging with people with learning disabilities: self-building active community lives in the context of personalisation
Researching belonging with people with learning disabilities: self-building active community lives in the context of personalisation

We wanted to understand more about how people with learning disabilities are building active community lives to help belonging. We spoke to 39 people from 29 different support organisations, 7 local authority representatives and 43 people with learning disabilities. They said belonging was about having the time to connect with other people in “everyday” places, being part of a supportive network and having the right choice and information. Belonging is like a cake. It needs the right ingredients. These ingredients include the right combination of people, places and times. Because of cuts to funding, many people with learning disabilities lack the right support, choice and information to access their communities. This is not belonging. ​. Abstract: Background This journal article draws on findings from a research project that examined how people with learning disabilities and their allies were seeking to build a sense of belonging. We wanted to focus on the concept of “belonging” in the context of personalisation and reduced government social care funding. Specifically, we sought to understand how people with learning disabilities and their supporters were coming together to “self-build” networks of support including friendship clubs and self-advocacy groups to enable a greater sense of belonging in their local communities. Methods Qualitative interviews were conducted with seven local authority representatives across four case study areas in the UK, as well as 39 staff across 29 organisations providing a range of day and evening support and activities. We also talked to 43 people with learning disabilities across the four areas about their experiences. Findings Our findings demonstrate how belonging involves a complex configuration of actors, places, times, relationships and institutional roles (much like the ingredients in a cake). The ways in which belonging intersects with agency and choice was also identified as an important and novel finding of our study. Conclusion While belonging is often presented to people as a desirable and realisable outcome of social inclusion policies, cuts in funding and a lack of appropriate support frustrate people's desires to meaningfully belong with other people in their local community. This demonstrates the importance of supporting social environments that meet people's needs for social connectedness and belonging.

belonging, community, inclusion, personalisation, support
1354-4187
Kaley, Alex
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Donnelly, John Paul
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Humphrey, Sally
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Reilly, Steven
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Macpherson, Hannah
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Hall, Edward
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Power, Andrew
b3a1ee09-e381-413a-88ac-7cb3e13b3acc
Donnelly, Lisa
b4bfb065-0b62-44c4-878a-85b15b1a8c96
Kaley, Alex
2da90a6e-0464-401d-a932-d60b0bbe2bde
Donnelly, John Paul
8aa9af49-a21d-4476-9d3a-27b1e479c2c9
Humphrey, Sally
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Reilly, Steven
a3dd4cda-f865-4178-9afa-3f9f533f1117
Macpherson, Hannah
1efe2095-65ab-4e31-b12a-58443964e184
Hall, Edward
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Power, Andrew
b3a1ee09-e381-413a-88ac-7cb3e13b3acc
Donnelly, Lisa
b4bfb065-0b62-44c4-878a-85b15b1a8c96

Kaley, Alex, Donnelly, John Paul, Humphrey, Sally, Reilly, Steven, Macpherson, Hannah, Hall, Edward, Power, Andrew and Donnelly, Lisa (2021) Researching belonging with people with learning disabilities: self-building active community lives in the context of personalisation. British Journal of Learning Disabilities. (doi:10.1111/bld.12394).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We wanted to understand more about how people with learning disabilities are building active community lives to help belonging. We spoke to 39 people from 29 different support organisations, 7 local authority representatives and 43 people with learning disabilities. They said belonging was about having the time to connect with other people in “everyday” places, being part of a supportive network and having the right choice and information. Belonging is like a cake. It needs the right ingredients. These ingredients include the right combination of people, places and times. Because of cuts to funding, many people with learning disabilities lack the right support, choice and information to access their communities. This is not belonging. ​. Abstract: Background This journal article draws on findings from a research project that examined how people with learning disabilities and their allies were seeking to build a sense of belonging. We wanted to focus on the concept of “belonging” in the context of personalisation and reduced government social care funding. Specifically, we sought to understand how people with learning disabilities and their supporters were coming together to “self-build” networks of support including friendship clubs and self-advocacy groups to enable a greater sense of belonging in their local communities. Methods Qualitative interviews were conducted with seven local authority representatives across four case study areas in the UK, as well as 39 staff across 29 organisations providing a range of day and evening support and activities. We also talked to 43 people with learning disabilities across the four areas about their experiences. Findings Our findings demonstrate how belonging involves a complex configuration of actors, places, times, relationships and institutional roles (much like the ingredients in a cake). The ways in which belonging intersects with agency and choice was also identified as an important and novel finding of our study. Conclusion While belonging is often presented to people as a desirable and realisable outcome of social inclusion policies, cuts in funding and a lack of appropriate support frustrate people's desires to meaningfully belong with other people in their local community. This demonstrates the importance of supporting social environments that meet people's needs for social connectedness and belonging.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 April 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 June 2021
Additional Information: Funding Information: Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/P011764/1). Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors. British Journal of Learning Disabilities published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords: belonging, community, inclusion, personalisation, support

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 450007
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/450007
ISSN: 1354-4187
PURE UUID: 12c773af-c164-4e16-9862-877aacecee45
ORCID for Andrew Power: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3887-1050

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Date deposited: 02 Jul 2021 16:34
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:24

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Contributors

Author: Alex Kaley
Author: John Paul Donnelly
Author: Sally Humphrey
Author: Steven Reilly
Author: Hannah Macpherson
Author: Edward Hall
Author: Andrew Power ORCID iD
Author: Lisa Donnelly

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