Abstract
Abstract
People living with a dementia and their family carers are at high risk of being excluded from the contact,
activities, information and services that help them remain resilient. Using interview data from family dementia carers, this
article explores the sources of enablement and inhibition in accessing these aspects of social inclusion. Carers and those living
with a dementia are found to inhibit and enable social inclusion for themselves, each other, and other carers. However, carers
attribute most agency to the external environment: what is provided and how easy it is to access, along with the attitudes and
beliefs of others. Poor communication surfaces as an impediment to social inclusion, with carers often left trying to bridge
communicative gaps despite limited knowledge and self-confidence.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics