2016
DOI: 10.1111/jar.12252
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‘Them Two Things are What Collide Together’: Understanding the Sexual Identity Experiences of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans People Labelled with Intellectual Disability

Abstract: Strategies for coping with abuse maintained participant's engagement in local communities. Sexuality was often problematized by others despite being generally accepted by participants. Coming out was a continual process of decision-making to facilitate safety and acceptance. To feel fully supported, participants desired holistic service provision sensitive to their sexuality and intellectual disability needs. Clinical and research implications are suggested.

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Cited by 49 publications
(80 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
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“…Three further papers looked at the experience of diagnosis and disability (Dysch et al, ; Kenyon et al, ; Monteleone & Forrester Jones, ) and two at relationships (Rushbrooke et al, ; Sullivan et al, ). Other papers explored the experience of bereavement (McRitchie et al, ); ageing (Newberry et al, ); retirement from day centres (Judge et al, ); trauma (Mitchell et al, ); fire setting (Rose, Lees‐Warley, & Thrift, ); mental health (Robinson et al, ); ethnic minorities (Malik et al, ); self‐concept (Pestana, ); and identity (Dinwoodie et al, ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Three further papers looked at the experience of diagnosis and disability (Dysch et al, ; Kenyon et al, ; Monteleone & Forrester Jones, ) and two at relationships (Rushbrooke et al, ; Sullivan et al, ). Other papers explored the experience of bereavement (McRitchie et al, ); ageing (Newberry et al, ); retirement from day centres (Judge et al, ); trauma (Mitchell et al, ); fire setting (Rose, Lees‐Warley, & Thrift, ); mental health (Robinson et al, ); ethnic minorities (Malik et al, ); self‐concept (Pestana, ); and identity (Dinwoodie et al, ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The remaining six papers were rated as “good” (Clarkson, Murphy, Coldwell, & Dawson, ; Cookson & Dickson, ; Dinwoodie, Greenhill, & Cookson, ; Roscoe, Petalas, Hastings, & Thomas, ; Rose et al, ; Stenfert Kroese et al, ). These papers met the majority of quality criteria but there were some exceptions, which included specifying the level of intellectual disability of the participants, and a lack of homogeneity in some samples.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When these are absent (as they often are), this affects queer disabled people's opportunities to have relationships and to develop a positive sense of self as a queer subject. The absence of a safe and supportive community may also impact their willingness to come out as queer (Blanchett, ; Blyth & Carson, ; Carson & Docherty, ; Corker, ; Dinwoodie et al, ; Löfgren‐Mårtenson, ; Sherry, ). Future studies should look at how queer and disability identities intersect as well as how disabled people experience and negotiate their sexual identities in different ways (Dworkin, ; Kafer, ; Kattari, ; Rainbow Ripples and Butler, ; Schulz, ).…”
Section: Challenges To Interpersonal Relationships and Sexual Exploramentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Secondly, there is a common tendency to collapse the LGB and T categories into one, problematically mashing sexual orientations with gender identities–expressions without acknowledging important nuances (Harley et al, ; Murib, ; Stryker, ). That is to say that more attention needs to be focused at the intersection of disabilities, trans* identities, and sexualities (Dinwoodie et al, ; McCann et al, ; McClelland et al, ). There are nonetheless some scholars doing fascinating work on the intersections of trans* and disability studies and politics (e.g., Baril, ; Clare, ; Mog & Swarr, ; Nakamura, ), revealing, for example, as Baril (, p. 6) has noted, an “ableist bias in trans studies and a cis(gender) normative bias in disability studies,” as well as opportunities for coalitions.…”
Section: Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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