Abstract

For people with learning disabilities, targeted violence has become routinized. In this article, we seek to explore the impact pervasive victimization has on their experience of community and participation and, through this, their health and wellbeing. People with learning disabilities experience significant inequality in health and wellbeing compared to their non-disabled peers, and the role of violence and victimization remains mostly neglected. By drawing on in-depth qualitative interviews with people with learning disabilities, we argue that abuse, disrespect and devaluing profoundly erode wellbeing. The complex forms of violence experienced by people with learning disabilities are critical to understanding the significant inequalities in health and wellbeing experienced by people with learning disabilities. We focus on community and misrecognition to move the focus from one that examines causation towards one that uncovers the layers of invisibility, and the complex relations that structure experiences from the perspective of people with learning disabilities themselves. By doing this, we locate violence and victimization as health and wellbeing concerns and seek to add a more comprehensive and holistic understanding of the social determinants of health. For the inequalities that structure the lives of people with learning disabilities to be holistically understood, they must be reframed as an issue of social justice, and violence must be identified as a central contributor to these inequalities.

Highlights

  • The violent victimization of people with learning disabilities is well established; what is much less well understood is the impact persistent victimization has on the lives and wellbeing of people with learning disabilities

  • We have explored the relationship between community, violence, and wellbeing

  • We have argued that improving the health and wellbeing of people with learning disabilities requires that everyday violent victimization be considered as a public health concern

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Summary

Introduction

The violent victimization of people with learning disabilities is well established; what is much less well understood is the impact persistent victimization has on the lives and wellbeing of people with learning disabilities. We will explore how violence shapes health and wellbeing, and the barriers it places on people with learning disabilities’ ability to participate in communities. People with learning disabilities often live isolated lives and feel excluded from their local communities (Power & Bartlett, 2018a, Hall & Bates, 2019). The role violence plays in this process has not been explored. Understanding violence against marginalized groups, and its impact, requires “that our analyses go beyond the patterning of crime rates” 69; Hydén, 2015) and prioritize the narratives of those who experience violence. We draw on people with learning disabilities’ experiences of violence in communities and its impact on their wellbeing to explore the relationship between violence, wellbeing, and belonging

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