Children's lives and rights under lockdown: a Northern Irish perspective by autistic young people

Gillian O'Hagan*, Bronagh Byrne

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)
114 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

By June 2021, children and young people had experienced two periods of lockdown and home learning in Northern Ireland. The detrimental impact of these periods of indefinite confinement is wider reaching than reported educational stagnation, with the fundamental rights of childhood: play; rest; and leisure; all adversely implicated. Autistic children's experiences of Covid-19 have been largely absent from current crisis and recovery discourse. This is the first published study to directly and specifically involve autistic children both as research advisors and as research participants in a rights-based participatory study relating to the pandemic. Drawing on concepts of ableist childism and epistemic injustice, this article presents, through Photovoice, the emotional, social and educational experiences of post- primary aged autistic young people in Northern Ireland during the first 2020 lockdown of the Covid-19 pandemic. The project was grounded in a child rights-based approach and was guided by a group of four autistic young advisors aged 11–15. The paper concludes by arguing that government responses to the pandemic, as experienced by autistic young people, act as forms of oppression that prioritises and further embeds normative non-autistic structures and responses under the guise of public health necessity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)29-54
Number of pages26
JournalChildren and Society
Volume37
Issue number1
Early online date02 Nov 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2023

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