Doing disability research in a Southern context: challenges and possibilities

Abstract

Research on disability issues in countries of the South is primarily dominated by a focus on generating large scale quantitative data sets. This paper discusses the many challenges, opportunities and dilemmas faced in designing and undertaking a qualitative research study in one district in India. The Disability, Education and Poverty Project (DEPP) aims at exploring the role of education in the lives of young people with disabilities living in poverty. A central focus of the research is to engage with the young people with disabilities themselves and to understand how they construed their lives and experiences. This paper discusses three issues which are of central concern to the project: identification of the sample group, appropriateness of the research methods and, finally, an examination of the assumptions underpinning the research process.

Citation

Singal, N. Doing disability research in a Southern context: challenges and possibilities. Disability and Society (2010) 25 (4) 415-426. [DOI: 10.1080/09687591003755807]

Doing disability research in a Southern context: challenges and possibilities

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2010