Something for the weekend: A posthuman decentring of person-centred care (Barbara Gibson)Open Pedagogy: A Systematic Review of Empirical FindingsRoland Barthes and the Value of ClosetsCosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social PhilosophyThe ethics of care discourse for future educationAgainst school: an epistemological critique“You have the right to love and be loved”: participatory theatre for disability justice with self-advocatesShould We Teach Critical Thinking?“The disability becomes secondary”: The use of mobile devices by small business managers with a disability in AustraliaOlder Adults and Outdoor Physical Activity Equipment: A Social Ecological AnalysisAgamben WTF, or … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #158
Wenche Bjorbækmo – 30 DoS – Day 14
I am a physiotherapist with long clinical experience and have a Ph.D. in health sciences, specialization in habilitation from 2011 at the University of Oslo. Currently, I am a professor at the Institute of Physiotherapy at Oslo Metropolitan University (OsloMet). Here I teach at the master's degree in health sciences and have a particular responsibility for the specialization in physiotherapy for children and adolescents. My research interest includes qualitative research with children and adolescents and their experiences of body, movement, activity, and participation in different contexts and situations in their everyday life. It also includes an interest in professional health … [Read more...] about Wenche Bjorbækmo – 30 DoS – Day 14
CPN Digest #157
Something for the weekend: Social Research and Disability: Developing Inclusive Research Spaces for Disabled ResearchersWhy should nurses care if Heidegger was a Nazi? Pragmatics, politics and philosophy in nursingA picture is worth 1000 words: examining students’ understanding of disability in definitions and drawingsWriting activities and the hidden curriculum in nursing educationNothing About Us Without Us (video)Praxis symposium IV: Higher education in post-pandemic times – (re)orienting transformation through praxisSlow death by policy manualHumility in health care: A modelNurses as agents of disruption: Operationalizing a framework to redress inequities in healthcare access among … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #157
CPN Digest #156
Something for the weekend: Midwives, Nurse Practitioners, and the Physicians Who (Still) Find Them ThreateningThinking with autoethnography in collaborative research: A critical, reflexive approach to relational ethicsHearing Gloves and Seeing Tongues? Disability, Sensory Substitution and the Origins of the Neuroplastic SubjectExoskeletons, Rehabilitation and Bodily CapacitiesSartre on the Body in “Being and Nothingness”Humility in health care: A modelHealth Promotion Practice podcast collectionTracking towards care: Relational affordances of self-tracking in gym cultureEthnography in Health Services Research: Oscillation Between Theory and PracticeSpare Rib, The British Women’s Health … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #156
CPN Digest #155
Something for the weekend: What the Frankfurt School has to say about bureaucratic progressivismSickness in the Workhouse: Poor Law Medical Care in Provincial England, 1834-1914The International Origins of Socialized Healthcare in CanadaEmpowering People to Make Healthier Choices: A Critical Discourse Analysis of the Tackling Obesity PolicyConcepts Between Kant and DeleuzeHumility in health care: A modelMerleau-Ponty, Trans Philosophy, and the Ambiguous BodySocially Constructing Healthy Eating: A Foucauldian Discourse Analysis of Healthy Eating Information and AdviceSuccessfully Negotiating Life Challenges: Learnings From Adults With Cerebral PalsySartre on the Body in “Being and … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #155
Up and coming with the CPN
Work in an organisation like the CPN can feel like breathing. Sometimes you're inhaling ideas, opportunities, and challenges, and other times you're putting things out into the atmosphere, wondering if your breath smells. Since 2014 we've been trying to be a positive force for an otherwise physiotherapy: writing blog posts, journal articles, and books; running online courses and month-long posting campaigns; making friends, and building networks. But our work has definitely slowed this year. We're writing less editorial blog posts and we ran no Critical Physiotherapy Course in 2021. Perhaps it is COVID, the climate emergency, the existential trauma of Trump, Brexit, and … [Read more...] about Up and coming with the CPN
CPN Digest #154
Something for the weekend: Including ‘inclusion health’? A discourse analysis of health inequalities policy reviewsMobilizing the Sense of “Fat”: A Phenomenological Materialist ApproachIntersectionality: Considering Identity When Working Towards a More Diverse, Equitable, and Inclusive FutureThe new platforms of health carePlanning an Environmentally Friendly In-Person ConferencePrimordial Haptics, 1925–1935: Hands, Tools and the Psychotechnics of PrehistoryTechnology, Capital Substitution and Labor Dynamics: Global Workforce Disruption in the 21st Century?The Fate of Phenomenology: Heidegger’s LegacyThere Is No Debate Over Critical Race TheoryAverting the middle class gaze: Pushing … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #154