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An inclusive outdoors? Disabled people's experiences of countryside leisure services

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An inclusive outdoors? Disabled people's experiences of countryside leisure services. / Burns, N.; Paterson, Kevin; Watson, Nick.
In: Leisure Studies, Vol. 28, No. 4, 01.10.2009, p. 403-419.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Burns, N, Paterson, K & Watson, N 2009, 'An inclusive outdoors? Disabled people's experiences of countryside leisure services', Leisure Studies, vol. 28, no. 4, pp. 403-419. https://doi.org/10.1080/02614360903071704

APA

Vancouver

Burns N, Paterson K, Watson N. An inclusive outdoors? Disabled people's experiences of countryside leisure services. Leisure Studies. 2009 Oct 1;28(4):403-419. Epub 2009 Sept 24. doi: 10.1080/02614360903071704

Author

Burns, N. ; Paterson, Kevin ; Watson, Nick. / An inclusive outdoors? Disabled people's experiences of countryside leisure services. In: Leisure Studies. 2009 ; Vol. 28, No. 4. pp. 403-419.

Bibtex

@article{ebb84e5d1cb243d480386c89664e995f,
title = "An inclusive outdoors? Disabled people's experiences of countryside leisure services",
abstract = "In recent years, disabled people's access to the outdoors has been the subject of renewed interest. This has in part been driven by legislative developments coupled with an increasing recognition that disabled people are under-represented as users of the countryside. However, very little is actually known about disabled people's views and experiences of the outdoors. Drawing on the concept of affordances and combining this with a social barrier's approach to disability, we explore disabled people's attitudes towards and experiences of woodland and countryside leisure. We argue that disabled people's reasons for being outdoors are more complex than simply seeking 'rehabilitation'; and, like their non-disabled counterparts, access to the outdoors is perceived for some as an integral aspect of wellbeing and revitalisation. Through engagement with the outdoors, disabled people are challenging normative constructions of who they are and their purpose in being in the countryside. The paper concludes by arguing that providers of outdoor leisure services need to go beyond barrier removal and understand disabled people's uses and views of the outdoors in planning the provision of services.",
keywords = "disability, countryside, diversity, leisure, inequality",
author = "N. Burns and Kevin Paterson and Nick Watson",
year = "2009",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1080/02614360903071704",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "403--419",
journal = "Leisure Studies",
issn = "0261-4637",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - An inclusive outdoors? Disabled people's experiences of countryside leisure services

AU - Burns, N.

AU - Paterson, Kevin

AU - Watson, Nick

PY - 2009/10/1

Y1 - 2009/10/1

N2 - In recent years, disabled people's access to the outdoors has been the subject of renewed interest. This has in part been driven by legislative developments coupled with an increasing recognition that disabled people are under-represented as users of the countryside. However, very little is actually known about disabled people's views and experiences of the outdoors. Drawing on the concept of affordances and combining this with a social barrier's approach to disability, we explore disabled people's attitudes towards and experiences of woodland and countryside leisure. We argue that disabled people's reasons for being outdoors are more complex than simply seeking 'rehabilitation'; and, like their non-disabled counterparts, access to the outdoors is perceived for some as an integral aspect of wellbeing and revitalisation. Through engagement with the outdoors, disabled people are challenging normative constructions of who they are and their purpose in being in the countryside. The paper concludes by arguing that providers of outdoor leisure services need to go beyond barrier removal and understand disabled people's uses and views of the outdoors in planning the provision of services.

AB - In recent years, disabled people's access to the outdoors has been the subject of renewed interest. This has in part been driven by legislative developments coupled with an increasing recognition that disabled people are under-represented as users of the countryside. However, very little is actually known about disabled people's views and experiences of the outdoors. Drawing on the concept of affordances and combining this with a social barrier's approach to disability, we explore disabled people's attitudes towards and experiences of woodland and countryside leisure. We argue that disabled people's reasons for being outdoors are more complex than simply seeking 'rehabilitation'; and, like their non-disabled counterparts, access to the outdoors is perceived for some as an integral aspect of wellbeing and revitalisation. Through engagement with the outdoors, disabled people are challenging normative constructions of who they are and their purpose in being in the countryside. The paper concludes by arguing that providers of outdoor leisure services need to go beyond barrier removal and understand disabled people's uses and views of the outdoors in planning the provision of services.

KW - disability

KW - countryside

KW - diversity

KW - leisure

KW - inequality

U2 - 10.1080/02614360903071704

DO - 10.1080/02614360903071704

M3 - Journal article

VL - 28

SP - 403

EP - 419

JO - Leisure Studies

JF - Leisure Studies

SN - 0261-4637

IS - 4

ER -