About this Research Topic
Since 2010, interest in PDA as an ASD in the UK, has resulted in the notion being a “culture-bound concept” in the UK. In part driven by some clinicians diagnosing PDA as an autism subtype and some researchers investigating PDA as an autism subtype. Independent from both the poor state of PDA research and ongoing-historical debates surrounding PDA. Despite arbiters of clinical practice taking a neutral stance on PDA and equally respecting divergent perspectives. There is a need to consider areas of overlap between divergent views on PDA, the implications of implementing different worldviews on PDA, and to test competing hypotheses.
Research suggests children and young persons with PDA tend to struggle in school-based settings, with high rates of exclusions or placement breakdowns. In the UK autism caregivers often use a PDA diagnosis as a proxy to gain access to good quality support packages for their children, in the broader context of special educational needs and disability (SEND) reforms and funding cuts to local authorities. However, similar approaches to PDA are widely available and are commonly utilised with autistic persons independent of PDA. Contextualising PDA in broader SEND debates can inform decisions surrounding PDA in research and practice.
Potential authors' literature review sections should discuss the four main schools of thought on PDA and reference scholarship by those with lived experience (both those who do and do not positively identify with PDA). Furthermore, authors should aim ad defining what schools of thought their axiology is based upon, their specific definition for PDA, their exact PDA behaviour profile and their exact threshold for PDA is. Therefore, for this Research Topic we welcome submissions which span a range of themes including (but not limited to):
- Systematic and scoping reviews, novel conceptualisations of PDA
- Refinement of proposed ontologies, such as an Attachment Disorder
- Contextualising PDA in historical and current notions of disability
- Questioning underlying assumptions and providing alternative explanations
- Ethical merits for different worldviews of PDA
- Personal perspectives on PDA
- How do PDA strategies compare with other approaches used with SEND persons and wider pedagogies
Keywords: Autism, Demand-Avoidance Phenomena, Extreme Demand Avoidance, Rational Demand Avoidance, Pathological Demand-Avoidance
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