Creating Time for LGBT+ Disabled Youth: Co-production Outside Chrononormativity

IF 1.2 3区 社会学 Q3 SOCIOLOGY Sociological Research Online Pub Date : 2023-02-22 DOI:10.1177/13607804231155001
Harvey Humphrey, Edmund Coleman-Fountain
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article explores how ‘chrononormative’ constructions of time shape research and offers an approach to co-production and research involvement that draws on insights from trans, queer, and disability studies. The article presents early reflections on an NIHR School for Social Care–funded research study, approved prior to but developed under the context of the Covid-19 pandemic, investigating personal support, sexuality, and gender in young disabled adults’ lives. This project has been supported by a Participatory Advisory Group (PAG) of LGBT+ young disabled adults and we reflect on how engagement with the PAG has shaped our understanding of debates around time and involvement in co-production discourse. Our engagement with trans, queer, and disability theory allows us to think about the constraints on time that such involvement has pushed against as we have sought to account for the diverse needs of the body-minds of the PAG in pandemic times. We suggest that this may speak to opening up the diversity and accessibility of co-production across other research contexts and intend this piece to encourage these conversations. The article thus offers a critical exploration of themes of time, embodiment, and identity in the way in which co-production is enacted in funded research.
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为LGBT+残疾青年创造时间:时间规范之外的合作
本文探讨了时间的“时间规范”结构如何影响研究,并提供了一种合作制作和研究参与的方法,该方法借鉴了跨性别、酷儿和残疾研究的见解。本文介绍了对国家卫生研究院社会关怀学院资助的一项研究的早期思考,该研究在2019冠状病毒病大流行之前获得批准,但在此背景下开展,调查了年轻残疾成年人生活中的个人支持、性行为和性别。这个项目得到了由LGBT+年轻残疾成年人组成的参与性咨询小组(PAG)的支持,我们反思与PAG的接触如何影响了我们对围绕时间的辩论和参与合作话语的理解。我们对跨性别、酷儿和残疾理论的研究使我们能够思考这种参与对时间的限制,因为我们试图解释PAG在大流行时期身心的不同需求。我们认为,这可能意味着在其他研究背景下开放合作制作的多样性和可及性,并打算通过这篇文章来鼓励这些对话。因此,本文提供了一个关键的探索主题的时间,体现和身份的方式,合作生产是在资助的研究颁布。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
67
期刊介绍: Sociological Research Online has been published quarterly online since March 1996. Articles published in the journal are peer-reviewed by a distinguished Editorial Board and qualify for inclusion in the UK Research Assessment Exercise. Sociological Research Online was established under the Electronic Libraries Programme (eLib). When funding ceased in September 1998, Sociological Research Online introduced institutional subscriptions in order to be able to continue publishing high quality sociology. The journal is still available without charge to individuals accessing it from non-institutional networks.
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