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GRASSROOTS ADVOCACY AND COLLABORATION MAKES POSSIBLE LIVING IN A NETWORKED NEIGHBORHOOD FOR PEOPLE WITH INTELLECTUAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES Marita.

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Presentation on theme: "GRASSROOTS ADVOCACY AND COLLABORATION MAKES POSSIBLE LIVING IN A NETWORKED NEIGHBORHOOD FOR PEOPLE WITH INTELLECTUAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES Marita."— Presentation transcript:

1 GRASSROOTS ADVOCACY AND COLLABORATION MAKES POSSIBLE LIVING IN A NETWORKED NEIGHBORHOOD FOR PEOPLE WITH INTELLECTUAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES Marita Nika Flagler,Ph.D., MSW Associate Professor at Shippensburg University, Pennsylvania, USA

2 BACKGROUND: THE RESIDENTIAL TASK FORCE Started by frustrated parents who pressured collaboration of agencies. Response to agency apathy in addressing needs of people with intellectual disabilities (IDD)

3 COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE Partnership Parents/family members Met needs Unmet needs People with ID County ID services management and staff Provider management and staff Advocacy organizations Representatives from school district Community members Non- hierarchical structure of power: Meetings are facilitated by a community member Leadership shared by a community member and a parent

4 ACHIEVEMENTS The Networked Neighborhood Plan Secured more than 6 million dollar in funding for home and community services and residential services Three new day programs with a community participation approach People were moved to less restrictive residential settings (apartment plus) 12 new group homes were opened, another one on the way.

5 RESEARCH QUESTIONS: 1.What are the ingredients of a successful grassroots advocacy organization? 2.What is the impact of a successful grassroots advocacy movement on its membership?

6 STUDY METHODS Design: Case study, participant observer, qualitative Participants: all members of the Residential Task Force (people with disabilities, parents and family members, community members, staff from three disability service agencies, staff from County IDD services) Data collection process: careful note taking, video-taped interviews with RTF leaders and members Data collection time frame: September 2006- June 2012 Data processing: Ground theory, identification of themes and subthemes.

7 FINDINGS: HOW DID IT HAPPEN? PROCESS “Learning to Listen and Listening to Learn “

8 HOW DID IT HAPPEN? PROCESS Development of a new narrative. Action-oriented (policy advocacy) Empowerment of members Shift in philosophy: search for meaningful inclusion and real self-determination of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities Success comes from collaboration

9 PROCESS: REDEFINING ADVOCACY SPACE RTF has become: A physical space (bringing all stakeholders together) Example: Meeting with leader of the PA Department of Welfare. A social space (creating opportunities for networking) A cultural space (where new values, rights and cultures are created) An innovative place (new programs are developed: Cumberland Perry Respite Care Program A learning space From each-other With each other For Shippensburg University students

10 IMPACT ON THE CULTURE OF PARTICIPATING AGENCIES More open to feedback More accountable Value collaboration with stakeholders Appreciate parent involvement Example: UCP request for new training

11 IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE Successful grassroots community advocacy organizations require: Time and work to develop cohesion Redefining advocacy space and using it intelligently to build capacity and sustainability Spill-over effect to impact the surrounding service community

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