全球运动需要全球领导:在东南亚扩展神经多样性包容性教育,超越以西方为中心的视角。

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q2 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Matthew Harrison, Jo Mosen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇观点文章借鉴了作者的生活经验和专业合作,探讨了在东南亚推进神经多样性包容性教育的机会和差距。虽然神经多样性范式在全球范围内获得了动力,但许多学术话语仍然集中在西方的观点上,往往边缘化了本地基础的方法和来自该地区的创新。我们认为,东南亚为理解和实施神经多样性提供了丰富的文化基础框架,这些框架由集体主义价值观、关系关怀和生活经验塑造。然而,这些贡献在学术论坛上的代表性不足,限制了它们对全球政策和实践的影响。通过传播地区声音和挑战西方主导的叙事,我们呼吁建立一个更具包容性和多元化的神经多样性愿景,反映不同文化背景下人类经验的多样性。本文强调了扩大东南亚在神经多样性研究和实践中的领导地位的迫切需要,并反映了研究人员支持而不是掩盖这些新兴运动的道德责任。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Global movements need global leadership: expanding neurodiversity-inclusive education beyond Western-centric perspectives in Southeast Asia.

This point of view article draws upon the lived experiences and professional collaborations of the authors to explore the opportunities and gaps in advancing neurodiversity-inclusive education across Southeast Asia. While the neurodiversity paradigm has gained momentum globally, much of the academic discourse remains centred on Western perspectives, often marginalising locally grounded approaches and innovations emerging from the region. Through our partnerships with researchers, advocates, and neurodivergent peers in countries such as Taiwan and the Philippines, we observe powerful examples of community-driven inclusion that remain largely invisible in the international literature. We argue that Southeast Asia offers rich, culturally grounded frameworks for understanding and enacting neurodiversity, shaped by collectivist values, relational care, and lived experience. However, these contributions are underrepresented in scholarly forums, limiting their impact on global policy and practice. By platforming regional voices and challenging Western-dominated narratives, we call for a more inclusive and pluralistic vision of neurodiversity that reflects the diversity of human experience across cultural contexts. This article highlights the urgent need to amplify Southeast Asian leadership in neurodiversity research and practice, and reflects on the ethical responsibilities of researchers to support, rather than overshadow, these emerging movements.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
9.50%
发文量
81
期刊介绍: The IJDD publishes scientific articles on work dealing with different approaches to the habilitation problems of people with an intellectual disability. The Journal covers the entire spectrum of intellectual disabilities, and is concerned with definitions, IQ, genetic predisposition, evaluation of abilities, learning interventions, challenging behaviour, medication, attitudes to death and bereavement, sexuality, legal aspects, WHO, NICE and other governmental guidelines, care in the community, advocacy, stress and coping strategies for families and carers - though this is not an exhaustive list. The unifying theme is that all of these aspects should be of practical help for those with intellectual disabilities or those caring for persons with intellectual disabilities. Emphasis is placed on the practical implications of the work of educationists, instructors, nurses, occupational and other therapists, psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers, whether taking place in a hospital setting or in community care. The Journal accepts contributions from anywhere in the world but they must be written in acceptable and fluent English, avoiding technical jargon as far as possible in view of the wide readership. The IJDD puts much emphasis on the practical application of scientific findings, and prospective contributors should keep in mind that acceptance of a manuscript for publication will depend to a great extent on its direct relevance to habilitation work. Readers of the IJDD expect that articles should give them some scientific help and insight in their practical work.
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