The National Disability Insurance Scheme and access to education: progressive or coercive policy discourse?
The National Disability Insurance Scheme and access to education: progressive or coercive policy discourse?
This paper explores the experiences of a small group of families in Australia in relation to recent reform to disability policy by way of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). Framed in critical disability perspectives of policy implementation research, the paper focuses on the extent to which the scheme articulates inclusive opportunities for children and young people with disabilities, particularly in relation to facilitating access to education. Interview data that illustrate families' expectations of the scheme and latter-day experiences, coercions and negotiations highlight the tensions that exist for scheme participants who draw on its provision to support their education. These first- and second-order policy effects indicate a welcome change to disability support in Australia, though the extent to which the scheme can advance inclusion for people with disabilities is uncertain, given the distance rendered between the policy and its participants and other service systems. The paper concludes with a theoretical discussion based on the analysis of how the NDIS is framed to interrelate with scheme participants and education and how it might be reframed for better outcomes.
1065-1079
Whitburn, Ben
ae7b4b48-a2c6-4c2b-8b95-29f8aa9af1ba
Moss, Julianne
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O'Mara, Joanne
fb456626-a8b2-4ace-9eef-6f60a61e4ee6
Whitburn, Ben
ae7b4b48-a2c6-4c2b-8b95-29f8aa9af1ba
Moss, Julianne
8b3a362e-0635-4b4f-99cb-8b25f7b77f38
O'Mara, Joanne
fb456626-a8b2-4ace-9eef-6f60a61e4ee6
Whitburn, Ben, Moss, Julianne and O'Mara, Joanne
(2017)
The National Disability Insurance Scheme and access to education: progressive or coercive policy discourse?
International Journal of Inclusive Education, 21 (10), .
(doi:10.1080/13603116.2017.1348549).
Abstract
This paper explores the experiences of a small group of families in Australia in relation to recent reform to disability policy by way of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). Framed in critical disability perspectives of policy implementation research, the paper focuses on the extent to which the scheme articulates inclusive opportunities for children and young people with disabilities, particularly in relation to facilitating access to education. Interview data that illustrate families' expectations of the scheme and latter-day experiences, coercions and negotiations highlight the tensions that exist for scheme participants who draw on its provision to support their education. These first- and second-order policy effects indicate a welcome change to disability support in Australia, though the extent to which the scheme can advance inclusion for people with disabilities is uncertain, given the distance rendered between the policy and its participants and other service systems. The paper concludes with a theoretical discussion based on the analysis of how the NDIS is framed to interrelate with scheme participants and education and how it might be reframed for better outcomes.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 June 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 July 2017
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Local EPrints ID: 471001
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471001
ISSN: 1360-3116
PURE UUID: bcbd082d-b50c-4d23-bea6-dc1f7021c964
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Date deposited: 24 Oct 2022 16:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:13
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Author:
Ben Whitburn
Author:
Julianne Moss
Author:
Joanne O'Mara
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