The purpose of this Special Issue on inclusive research is to capture internationally, “How far have we come?” and “Where do we need to go?” Such questions are relevant now that it has been close to two decades since Walmsley and Johnson (2003) first introduced the inclusive research paradigm in their text, Inclusive research with people with learning disabilities: past, present, and futures. Within this Special Issue we have reprinted 18 articles that promote inclusive research as a paradigm that has succeeded in transferring power to people with intellectual disabilities who were once the "researched" to now being and becoming the "researchers". The articles draw upon the work of co-researchers both with and without the lived experience of disability who have adopted inclusive research as a paradigm to redress the exclusion of people with intellectual disabilities as researchers. All the 18 articles have an eye on the future and are sequenced across the following themes: the individual impact of being and becoming an inclusive researcher; building inclusive research relationships as a duo; being part of an inclusive research network; and using inclusive research to push boundaries and facilitate issues of importance identified by people with disabilities. The reprint concludes with two articles where inclusive researchers of long standing reflect on how to continue to walk forward on the road that aided by this reprint will become more well-travelled?
Inclusive Research:: Is the Road More or Less Well Travelled?
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Celebrating Thirty Years of Inclusive Research
Danielle Garratt, Kelley Johnson, Amanda L. Miller, Shaun Picken, Janice Slattery, Jan Walmsley
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Graduating University as a Woman with Down Syndrome:: Reflecting on My Education
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Sofie Sergeant, Henriette Sandvoort, Geert van Hove, Petri Embregts, Kim van den Bogaard, Elsbeth Taminiau
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A Closer Look at the Quest for an Inclusive Research Project:: ‘I Had No Experience with Scientific Research, and then the Ball of Cooperation Started Rolling’
Miriam Zaagsma, Mark Koning, Christien van Andel, Karin Volkers, Alice Schippers, Geert van Hove
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Reflections on the Implementation of an Ongoing Inclusive Research Project
Isabel Bonello, Sandra Borg, Anne Marie Callus, Cristina Grech
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Being an Inclusive Researcher in a National ConsultationExercise—A Case Study
Greta Westermann, Erin Louise Whittle, Susan Adrian, Suzanne Jessep, Melanie Nolan, Bruce O'Brien, Jasamit Pannu, Elizabeth R. Young, Mary Ann O’Donovan
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Reflections on Working Together in an Inclusive Research Team
Phillippa Carnemolla, Jack Kelly, Catherine Donnelley, Aine Healy
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Doing Research Inclusively:: Understanding What It Means toDoResearch with and Alongside People with ProfoundIntellectual Disabilities
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Relationships of People with Intellectual Disabilities in Timesof Pandemic:: An Inclusive Study
Carol Puyalto, Maialen Beltrán Arreche, Tania Coll Ferrer, Gemma Díaz Garolera, Marta Figueras Sánchez, Judit Fullana Noell, Cristina Gonzalez, María Pallisera i Díaz, Joan Pujolar Cos, Ana Rey
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Inclusive Research in Health, Rehabilitation and AssistiveTechnology:: Beyond the Binary of the ‘Researcher’ andthe ‘Researched’
Natasha Layton, Emma Bould, Richard Buchanan, Jonathon Bredin, Libby Callaway
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“Digging Deeper” Advocate Researchers’ Views on Advocacyand Inclusive Research
Robert Hopkins, Gerard Minogue, Joseph McGrath, Lisa Jayne Acheson, Pauline Concepta Skehan, Orla McMahon, Brian Hogan
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Inclusive Research and Intellectual Disabilities:: MovingForward on a Road Less Well-Travelled
Patricia O’Brien, Edurne García Iriarte, Roy McConkey, Sarah Butler, Bruce O'Brien
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