“…However, there is body of work that recognises the social and cultural elements related to disablement but that does not necessarily identify with disability studies or any of its theoretical narratives as such (e.g. Bigby, Clement, Mansell, & Beadle-Brown, 2009;Goodwin, 2020;Granlund, Wilder, & Almqvist, 2013;McCormack, 2020;Nind, 2007;Pawlyn & Carnaby, 2009;Samuel, Nind, Volans, & Scriven, 2008: Simmons & Watson, 2014Talman, Wilder, Stier, & Gustafsson, 2019;Tilley, Ledger, & Haas, 2020;Vorhaus, 2013Vorhaus, , 2014. Alongside these kinds of contributions, our work can be seen to be in the same league as the work of Clement and Bigby (2013) on living arrangements, Goode's (1994) ethnographic research on children with congenital deaf-blindness and intellectual disability, Johnson and Walmsley's (2010) contribution on the meaning of a good life with reference to current policies and ideologies, and Vorhaus's (2016) empirically informed philosophical work on children with PIMD.…”