Full Description
This volume offers a critical orientation to inclusive education by centering the learnings that emerge from regional struggles in the world to actualize global ideals and commitments. Grounded in assumptions that challenge medicalized notions of disability and difference, the inquiries within this book register a range of theoretical frameworks. Such frames compel us to both interrogate the foundational premises within global discourses of inclusion and to inquire into the complexities wrought by entrenched systems of schooling. Collectively, they articulate the inseparability of inclusive education from historical processes that include conditions in post-colonial/post-war contexts as well as "developed" regions. The book therefore acknowledges and values the fluidity of inclusive processes that cannot be neatly pre-defined. This conscious awareness of the contingent nature of inclusive practice suggests new modes of coming to know inclusion for the authors in this book. Their chapters explore methodological practices that can re-direct inquiries to hold such complexity while retaining commitments to inclusion.
Contents
Foreword; Justin J. W. Powell
Chapter 1. Theories, Contexts, Practices : Traveling Alongside the Possibilities of "Inclusion"; Srikala Naraian and Bettina Amrhein
Part 1. Understanding Inclusion Via Struggles Around the World
Chapter 2. A World Exposed: The Plaintive Plea for Inclusion; Roger Slee
Chapter 3. Historical and International-Comparative Perspectives on Special Needs Assessment Procedures - Current Findings and Potentials for Future Research; Till Neuhaus and Michaela Vogt
Chapter 4. Genealogical Critique of Institutionalising "Inclusive Education" in Indonesia; Johannes Tschapka and Tri Nawangsari
Chapter 5. Disability Studies, Disability Arts and Students' Perspectives: New Critical Tools for Inclusive Education; Julie Allan
Part II. Critical Interrogation of Inclusive Practices in Local Contexts
Chapter 6. Incessant Agitations: Inclusive Education and the Politics of Disposability; Tamara Handy
Chapter 7. Inclusion and Exclusion in Local governance: A Post-Development and Spatial Perspective on a Field Study from Benin; Eva Bulgrin
Chapter 8. The Struggle for the Power of Interpretation of Inclusive Education in Germany-Multi-Level Theoretical Considerations; Bettina Amrhein
Chapter 9. Stifled or Loosened Course of Inclusive Education in Rwanda: Interrogating Policy and Practice in Africa; Evariste Karangwa
Part III. Methodological / Epistemological Commitments in Analyzing Inclusive Education Processes and Practice
Chapter 10. Establishing and Maintaining Participatory Elements in Transnational and Cultural Research Collaboration on Inclusive Education; Michelle Proyer
Chapter 11. The Notion of Contexts in International Research on Inclusive Teaching Practices: Perspectives Derived from Reconstructive Research Approaches; Simon Reisenbauer and Eva Kleinlein
Chapter 12. Reconstructive Approaches in Inclusive Education: Methodological Challenges of Normativity and Reification in International Inclusion Research; Benjamin Badstieber, Julia Gasterstädt, and Andreas Köpfer
Chapter 13. Stimulating Methodological Innovations in Researching Inclusion: Posthumanism and Disability; Srikala Naraian
Part IV. Conclusion
Chapter 14. Staying Mindful, Moving with (Un)certainty; Bettina Amrhein and Srikala Naraian