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Loretta Gasparini; Shaun Ziegenfusz; Natalie Turner; Suze Leitão; Michelle C. St Clair; Emily Jackson – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2025
Background: Eighty-five percent of medical research goes to waste, partly because it is not appropriately communicated to stakeholders. This represents a critical issue for the research community, especially because individuals who are impacted by research should be able to readily access that research. Making research findings accessible to key…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Information Dissemination, Medical Research, Access to Information
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Wael K. Altali; Valerie L. Karr; Anne Hayes – Journal of Disability Policy Studies, 2025
In 1997, the United States Agency for International Development established a policy focused on including people with disabilities in its development efforts. For the past two decades, this initiative has been echoed globally, yet research on its effectiveness remains limited. This study revisits a previous 2015 analysis by examining the language…
Descriptors: Public Agencies, Federal Government, Disabilities, Inclusion
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Ellen E. Seiter – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Films provide many memorable scenes of care that both shape and reinforce ideas about who deserves care, how carers should behave, and what kinds of people appear 'naturally' suited to the labors of caring for children, the sick, the elderly and the disabled (namely women). My specific interest here is in films about migrant domestic workers in…
Descriptors: Films, Caring, Migrants, Child Care
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Barbara Gross – Intercultural Education, 2025
The incorporation of intersectionality into the study of belonging and inclusion/exclusion mechanisms in educational institutions acknowledges the complexity of potentially discriminatory factors such as ethnic background, linguistic diversity, gender, class, and (dis)ability, and the overlaps and interaction between them when it comes to…
Descriptors: Intersectionality, Inclusion, Ethnic Groups, Language Usage