“Advocacy may be given freely but there is always a hidden and forgotten cost”
Dr Larry Arnold reflects on the London ESRC seminar on participatory autism research and what people need in terms of support to be an effective researcher or participant.
I would like people to think about those things that make it personally difficult to be involved in academic processes, and research generally.
This is a call to both those who have support at home, and those who don’t as I really want to focus on those things apart from daily living, the extra on top that is required to be fully functional as a meaningful contributor to research.
To begin with a little anecdote from my supervisor about a
well known and well publicised “ground breaking” piece of research and the
participants, that there might be considerable problems with the validity of
the findings when you consider some of the complaints from some of the
individuals who took part at what discomforts they had to put up with in the
hotel before.
I can personally echo some of that from my own experience of travel to take
part in research and I can be fairly sure that we all have our stories,
including about the recent seminar and how that might have increased our stress
levels.
When we do all participate in these things, and people think
they have been a success because we have managed to articulate things, I think
of the analogy of the duck, who you might see gliding serenely across the pond
unaware of how furiously it is paddling beneath the water.
Perhaps this could be more formalised in the form of a questionnaire but for
now I am suggesting things to think about.
Begin:
Start with what you actually find difficult, don’t leave anything out, all the
things that make the day more stressful, or require you to limit the number of
times you are able to do this
Next.
What are the things in terms of personal assistance, technological assistance
or otherwise that you think would make it easier, don’t worry about what it
would cost in real life to provide it, all, we have to let them know.
FWIW these are the same things that were being discussed in
the recent symposium on access for post graduate students and as that is a
continuing process I am sure that there is likely to be a lot we can learn from
that.
For example, some of us were able to gain support at our universities from DSA,
for me that meant being able to have a “non medical helper” that is to say a
personal assistant for internal events and courses, however the question was
asked at the symposium if anyone had asked for that assistance to be made
available at an external event, like the symposium we were attending. It seems
that the universal answer was that no-one had ever been able to get that
accepted.
If you cannot get that even within a support structure like DSA, then how much
harder is it to get the necessary levels of support if you are not a student or
post grad researcher. I am certainly not happy that it is supposedly available
from access to work because knowing what I do of DWP bureacreacy we may be in
chocolate teapot territory, and the brochure writers fantasy land.
In essence what we need is a research
participants package, something guaranteed, something that should be part of
every grant that is given for research.
Behind my own doctorate which I am so recently celebrating
there is long back story. There are the things I was able to do because I could
access support through DSA, but often a backstory of how hard you sometimes
have to argue for them to be included as an academic need, which I could go
into more another time.
There were costs, there were same costs that every student has, that is the
fees and the transport and subsistence costs, but beyond that I paid over the
years considerably more in fees, transport and subsistence costs to be an
effective part of a wider community, to attend conferences for which you are
expected to fund yourself even if you are presenting a paper and much else.
The only reason you ever see my name anywhere is because I have purchased a
seat at the negotiating table as it were, and that cannot be right. Advocacy may be given freely but there is
always a hidden and forgotten cost.
So you can see where this is leading, beyond the explicit identifying of those things that we individually need, there is the need to build in the cost of that and to say without it research is not anything like as valid as the results may serve to indicate.
We need funders to recognise this, and we need a drive to make this as fundamentally important as the funding of electricity bill for a physics lab.