2008
DOI: 10.1108/13666282200800029
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SCOPE for social inclusion?

Abstract: This paper sets out to look at social inclusion among users within services, asking the questions is there a general measure of agreement about what social inclusion means to people, and is there an accepted way of measuring these views? The initiative was funded by the NIHR Research Methods programme now part of the Health Technology Assessment group at Southampton. Nine focus groups explored what people understand by ‘social inclusion’ and concept mapping was used to try and define the term. The research met… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…This paper builds upon that work undertaken in the UK by two of the present authors, in which nine groups representative of the UK population participated in concept mapping exercises to provide a clearer understanding of how the term is perceived, which domains are relevant and, which indicators need to be included in measures of social inclusion (Huxley et al 2006;Huxley et al 2008). This paper reports the first phase of an ESRC funded replication study to develop a Chinese language measure of social inclusion (SCOPE-C) based on translation and cultural adaptation of the UK Social and Community Opportunities Profile (SCOPE).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This paper builds upon that work undertaken in the UK by two of the present authors, in which nine groups representative of the UK population participated in concept mapping exercises to provide a clearer understanding of how the term is perceived, which domains are relevant and, which indicators need to be included in measures of social inclusion (Huxley et al 2006;Huxley et al 2008). This paper reports the first phase of an ESRC funded replication study to develop a Chinese language measure of social inclusion (SCOPE-C) based on translation and cultural adaptation of the UK Social and Community Opportunities Profile (SCOPE).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Social inclusion is dynamic, in addition to being multi-dimensional, and changes over time; it is both objective and subjective, at the same time (Huxley et al, 2008). The "social inclusion/exclusion dialectic produces specific subjectivities which range from feeling included to feeling discriminated against and rejected.…”
Section: Social Representation Of Social Inclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study of the relationship between social inclusion and mental health has generated much interest among social services providers as well as social scientists (Huxley et al, 2008). A relevant way of measuring social inclusion benefits both social policy makers and mental health services providers in designing and implementing policies and intervention programmes for mental health services users.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A relevant way of measuring social inclusion benefits both social policy makers and mental health services providers in designing and implementing policies and intervention programmes for mental health services users. The measure can be used as an outcome measure as well as an initial social assessment for agencies (Huxley et al, 2008). A social inclusion index -Social and Communities Opportunities Profile (SCOPE) -was developed and validated in English in UK (Huxley et al, 2006;2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%