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A Right to be Included: The Best and Worst of Times for Learners with Disabilities
Author(s) -
Ben Whitburn,
Matthew Krehl Edward Thomas
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
scandinavian journal of disability research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.354
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 1745-3011
pISSN - 1501-7419
DOI - 10.16993/sjdr.772
Subject(s) - temporality , human rights , inclusion (mineral) , materialism , politics , sociology , disability studies , historical materialism , epistemology , compulsory education , pedagogy , gender studies , political science , law , philosophy , marxist philosophy
This paper presents a critical analysis of the temporal politics of inclusive education. Drawing on the misalignment of universalist human rights discourse with the prevalence of materialist conceptualisations of disability, it instead advocates for a non-representative and temporal approach to inclusive practice. In four parts, it begins by presenting a temporal framework to the analysis of disability and inclusive education. Characterising the historical present as the best and worst of times for people with disabilities, immediately following is a consideration of the legislated inclusiveness of compulsory and non-compulsory education. a discussion of the diachronic and synchronic positioning of inclusion, social model conceptualisations and human rights discourse follows, from which the paper concludes with a conceptual framework of temporality that accounts for nuances to human rights and the ways that assemblages of education and disability mesh together in inclusionary events.

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