| Literature DB >> 35768395 |
Deborah O'Connor1, Mariko Sakamoto2, Kishore Seetharaman3, Habib Chaudhury3, Alison Phinney4.
Abstract
Citizenship has provided an important conceptual framework in dementia research and practice over the past fifteen years. To date, there has been no attempt to synthesize the multiple perspectives that have arisen in this literature. The purpose of this paper is to explore, reflect on, and contrast, the key concepts and trends in the citizenship discourse as it relates to people with dementia. Using a scoping review methodology, forty-nine articles were identified for review. Despite the use of different descriptors, thematic analysis revealed four core themes underpinning citizenship discourse: 1) the relationality of citizenship; 2) facilitated agency and autonomy; 3) attention to stigma, discrimination and exclusion; and 4) recognition of the possibilities of identity and growth. Overall, this scoping review found a major emphasis on expanding definitions of agency and autonomy to render citizenship unconditional and inclusive of the diverse life experiences of people living with dementia. Notably, there is recognition that a more intersectional lens for embedding the subjective experience within a broader socio-political context is needed. Whilst the adoption of a citizenship lens in dementia research and practice has had real-world implications for policy and research, its exploration and use continue to be led by academics, highlighting the importance that future research involve input form people with dementia.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; agency and autonomy; citizenship; human rights; scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35768395 PMCID: PMC9483710 DOI: 10.1177/14713012221111014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dementia (London) ISSN: 1471-3012
Figure 1.Step-wise process of screening articles.
Key Themes of Citizenship.
| Author(s), year & Type of paper | The relationality of citizenship | Nuances of agency | Autonomy as facilitated | Focus of stigma, discrimination and exclusion | Identity and growth |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Focus on examining lived experience of dementia and interpersonal relationships within the context of broader socio-political context | Focus on agency and power of the person living with dementia | Challenges previous positions (e.g., personhood) that frame people living with dementia as “passively dependent on others for affirmation” (p. 110) | Resisting injustice is a key aspect of citizenship in the context of dementia | Recognizes the need to focus on people’s multiple social roles and identities (and the power affiliated with different positions) |
| Conceptual paper | Introduces understanding of citizenship as social, not just political. Reframes citizenship as a social practice and constructed within one’s relationships with each other and society in general | Shift from traditional understanding of citizenship which excludes people living with dementia based on lack of agency to a view of people with dementia as people with power | More inclusive approach than traditional understandings of citizenship that excludes people based on capacity for self-determination | Focus on a) people’s right to be free of stigma and discrimination, and b) the facilitation of the right to freedom from discrimination through relationships and practice | Recognizes dementia as both a time of loss but also with potential for growth in other areas; Accounts for people changing and growing |
| 2. | Focus on: a)social relationships within the broader context of legal, political, and social rights, belonging, and contribution to society; b) interrelatedness of personal, interpersonal, and structural contexts, and c) people’s co-construction of self-narratives with others | Narrative agency: continued opportunity to tell one’s story from a subjective perspective, including the opportunity to form and control that narrative | Focus on: the recognition of narrative interdependency; and, supporting people with dementia to have the opportunity, time, and resources to develop their own narratives and become involved in policy- and decision-making processes | Highlights marginalization of the narratives of people living with dementia and enabling people with dementia to shape their own narratives | Focus on how master/policy narratives constitute an identity that is not aligned to the identities of people living with dementia (which in turn limits opportunities for participation and fulfilment) |
| Conceptual paper | Source of narrative agency includes alternative forms of expression, e.g., non-verbal expression | ||||
| 3. | Takes into account broader relationships such as the legislative, policy-level, and social influences on people’s citizenship | Legislation can empower people with dementia when they retain capacity and protect them when they do not – but in restricted ways only | Challenges the neglect and ill-treatment of people living with dementia |
| |
| Conceptual paper | Highlights need for care providers to receive guidance and training to conduct capacity assessment and support decision-making | Focus on ensuring (through the appointment of capacity advocates) that people living with dementia are not discriminated against on the basis of lack of capacity | |||
| 4. | Focus on a) how different institutions exert power over individuals, and b) people’s actual power | Vulnerability framed not as a state of lack of power but as a state that warrants special care and protection due to lowered capacity, without loss of citizenship and rights | Recognizes both active and passive citizenship | Concerned with striking a balance between rights and protection in the context of decreasing capacity. | |
| Conceptual paper | Power is realized through interdependence with others. | Prioritizes supported decision-making rather than proxy decision-making, to ensure the person is involved | Emphasis on |
| |
| 5. | Calls for greater commitment at the policy level to maximize people’s ability to exercise self-determination and facilitating their rights in the context of care | Challenges common assumptions of absence of
capacity, and equating dementia to lack of
capacity | Focus on protecting people’s autonomy and right to self-determination in case of lower decision-making capacity | Challenges a)the denial of opportunities for self-determination based on inaccurate judgements of capacity, and b) the inappropriate exclusion of people living with dementia from decision-making (related to their care) |
|
| 6. | Focus on power relations that shape the lived experience of dementia and seeks to politicize personal experience | Challenges the medical model’s positioning of people living with dementia as voiceless and instead privileges their agency and rights | Focus on relational autonomy : People living with dementia do not always make decisions about their lives individually, rather they are situated in a social network while making decisions | Focus on challenging stigma and discrimination |
|
| Conceptual paper | Expands the notion of citizenship beyond political participation to also encompass social participation | Positions people as “experiencing speaking subject with desires, needs and agency” and as “active agents” (p. 245) | Frames care relationships through the lens of interdependence and negotiation and rejects notions of independence or dependence | In case people have needs and require care/support their position as citizens should not be immediately delegitimized | |
| 7. | Societal discrimination results in the ‘social
death’ of people living with dementia; | A more traditional approach to citizenship is based on personal competence, characterizing people living with dementia as ‘passive actors’ and denying them the “possibility of active citizenship” due to the lack of engagement owing to lower cognition and communication skills (p. 663). | Emphasis on facilitating decisional
autonomy | Personal or cultural stigma surrounding
dementia could also influence care providers’ behaviour with
people |
|
| 8. | Focus on solidarity and empowerment fostered through mutual support among people living with dementia | Focus on people living with dementia as agents of change | People living with dementia wish to be involved in and influence decision-making for as long as they are able to make informed decisions and choices and shape their own narratives | Focus on eliminating stigmatizing attitudes or practices |
|
| Research study | Citizenship is facilitated by creating spaces for mutuality for people living with dementia to take the lead. | Power imbalances in interdependent relationships result in vulnerability and greater susceptibility for marginalization | |||
| 9. | Focus on the asymmetric power dynamics in relationships that limit people’s ability to exercise citizenship | Challenges the notion of citizenship based on productivity and ability to work, which positions people living with dementia as second-class citizens | Rights-based approach to dementia care focuses
on facilitating autonomy and self-determination | Identifies macro-level constraints that deter providers from adopting a rights-based approach and impede the realization of human rights through care practices | Frames abuse, neglect, and discrimination as violation of human rights, dignity, and identity |
| Conceptual paper | Focus on recognition of and challenging barriers to participation | ||||
| 10. | Focus is on people’s social positions and networks and leveraging them to influence decision-making and achieve personal goals | Focus on more active participation while acknowledging the exclusion of people who are capable of less-active forms of participation |
| Experiences of stigma and discrimination can motivate people living with dementia to take action (e.g., involvement in campaigns) | Focus on a shared, distinctive, and collective identity formed through participation and engagement, and b) a sense of solidarity |
| Research study | Forging interpersonal connections to produce macro-level impact | Group identity used to further people’s ability to influence decision-making | |||
| 11. | Focus on collective experience and others’ recognition of people’s right to participate is central to an inclusive approach | Citizenship should not be limited to being politically active and should be expanded to include people who are involved in more diverse ways |
| Stigmatizing/discriminatory acts (e.g., invalidation of people’s diagnosis because they do not conform to stereotypes) is a barrier to citizenship practice | Emphasis on collective identity rather than self-identity; Solidarity as empowering and grounding |
| Research study | Need for more inclusivity to counter (biomedical) views based on deficit that limit participation | Focus on treating people living with dementia with equality and fairness and not as second-class citizens | |||
| 12. | Examines how policy constructions of dementia can legitimize or challenge social constructions of citizenship of people living with dementia | Calls for a shift within policy narratives from a medical deficit-focused approach to one that is more inclusive and democratic | Challenges policy narratives that negatively frame dependence as a failure in terms of burden or cost | The lack of visibility and exclusion of people living with dementia in policy narratives limits the opportunities for people to exercise their citizenship, be valued and recognized, and influence decision-making |
|
| Research study | Perceptions, attitudes, and assumptions regarding people living with dementia play a key role in framing them as citizens | Suggests framing people living with dementia (in the context of policy narratives) as capable citizens” to highlight their agency and power | To adopt a more dynamic citizenship approach that takes into account the progressively evolving nature of people’s cognitive capacities due to dementia | ||
| 13. | Framing citizenship as a practice focuses on the relationships between people living with dementia and others. | Citizenship involves a claim not only to tangible rights to services and resources but also to agency, participation, and power | Involvement in individual or collective decisions (e.g., as part of steering committees, organizational governance, and decision-making forums) and having choice are critical to realize citizenship | Traditional understanding of citizenship (as a status) is based on inclusion/exclusion criteria | Citizenship practices help support a sense of identity and belonging |
| Research study | Constitutes actions and practices of individuals and collectives of people living with dementia at national, communal, and organizational levels | Acknowledges varied forms/levels of participation and not just being involved in an active manner | Draws in notion of interdependence: shift in seeing people as capable of not only receiving care but making meaningful contributions | Citizenship as a practice is a more inclusive approach as it does not involve inclusion or exclusion criteria | |
| 14. | Citizenship is shaped by relational aspects (inequalities) emerging both in the home as well as outside. | Emphasis on full participation of people living with dementia | Focus on the role played by each person in shaping citizenship, instead of viewing it solely as a status conferred upon people by the state. | Focus on struggle against injustice for fairness and equality. Micro-injustices within domestic spaces also play a part in shaping political citizenship at broader levels | Focus on opportunities for growth |
| Conceptual paper | . | Focus on ordinariness of citizen participation, going beyond political participation, and opportunities for growth | Suggests that stigma is the most prominent barrier to realizing citizenship in the community | ||
| 15. | Citizenship of people living with dementia is relational to others | Integrity of care/guidance for practice is needed in order to “avoid domination” (p. 310) for people with dementia | Criticizes the denial of citizenship of people living with dementia on the basis of notions of reduced independence or autonomy. | Challenges societal norms that contribute to marginalization of people living with dementia | Citizenship is linked to people’s identity and maintaining/fulfilling their social roles that help render their lives as meaningful |
| Conceptual paper | Under-resourced social care has negative
implications on the citizenship of older people living with
dementia | Focus on promoting autonomy through interdependence. Shared decision-making challenges the notion of inability of people living with dementia | Focus on elimination of sources of oppression that undermine rights and citizenship and recognition of vulnerability to better understand inequalities and delineate additional rights for people living with dementia. | The maintenance of social roles can be challenging and results in exclusion | |
| 16. Russell (2016) | Findings from this study support a biopsychosocial context for understanding the lived experience of dementia via co-produced learning | People living with dementia acting as educators about the dementia experience by co-producing learning. | Participating in a learning initiative provided opportunities to enhance confidence | Involving people with dementia in post-secondary education can promote social justice, challenge discrimination, recognize diversity and increase inclusion |
|
| Research study | Opportunity for them to engage as active social agents/address power imbalances | ||||
| 17. | Examines relationships that older women with dementia have with one another and with their hairdressers with a focus on embodied citizenship | Discusses creative and collective forms of agency, in particular control over appearance/appearance-related practices | The hairdressing salon enabled social participation for older women with dementia | Intersecting forms of resistance unfold in the hair salon – the everyday spaces in which citizenship is expressed and discrimination is resisted. | Paying attention to one’s personal appearance is integral to one’s identity/biography; Focuses explicitly on gender |
| 18. | Citizenship is fostered through narrative and arts-based connections | Becoming aware and feeling empowered by continued abilities and possibilities, rather than focusing on “tragedy discourse” common with dementia | Demonstrates how arts-based and narrative activities can facilitate people to exercise citizenship | There is a need to challenge the tragedy discourse in dementia which perpetuates stigma and discrimination | Participatory arts can nurture personal growth |
| Research study | A relational process of opening up spaces for voices and stories, constructing alternative narratives of dementia through the arts | Activist efforts in challenging entrenched discourses contributes to the sense of being a citizen in the community | Social contexts can foster the co-construction of new narratives | ||
| 19. | Citizenship is constructed through people’s everyday social practices and interactions with family members, wider community, and physical environment | Familiarity with the physical and social environment (history of living in the same area) both negatively and positively influences active citizenship | Focus on preservation of autonomy as an integral part of citizenship and challenges the approach of focusing on individual-level deficits and incapacity by adopting a more relational approach | Stigma is a barrier to maintaining a sense of normality and belonging to the community. It hinders social engagement, which is integral to citizenship practices | Focus on preservation of identity as an integral part of citizenship |
| Research study | A reciprocal approach focuses not only on the supports that people require but also their strengths and assets (p. 435) | Ability to adapt and make decisions that protect one’s self-esteem and dignity may be limited or not fostered by others | Others’ stigmatizing or exclusionary attitudes and behaviour diminishes agency of people living with dementia | Citizenship is affected by personal histories and changes in people’s social roles, identities, and their sense of belonging to the community | |
| 20. | Focus on the role of embodiment in reciprocal engagement | Focus on self-expression through embodiment as more inclusive; and embodied agency, or self-hood where decision-making ability is not predicated upon cognitive capacity but also stems from pre-reflective aspects of human condition. | Questions that autonomy should be based on the ideal of self-determination and people’s ability to make informed choices on their own | Challenges the denial of citizenship rights of people living with dementia |
|
| Conceptual paper | Requires others to support people’s right to self-expression while protecting them from harm. | Suggests this understanding results in people in later stages of dementia being excluded | Embodied self-expression is fundamental to the human condition and must be supported as a human right | ||
| 21. | Draws attention to the mutuality between being
an independent person with rights in society
| Highlights the exclusionary nature of a citizenship approach that assumes capacity for self-determination.as a pre-requisite | Highlights the difficulty of ascertaining whether someone has the capacity for self-determination or has decision-making incapacity and needs assistance. | Predicating participation upon intact capacity for self-determination results in inequality and exclusion |
|
| Conceptual paper | Highlights legal constructions of citizenship and how it informs decision-making and maintaining best interests of people living with dementia | Challenges the norm of citizenship having to be active and the assumption that citizens have the capacity to represent themselves. | Advocates for a supportive decision-making approach as a means for enhancing citizenship across all stages of the dementia experience | ||
| 22. | Citizenship is expressed through people’s communication with care providers | Focus on people’s ability to communicate their needs and cope with communication difficulties | Health and social care providers assumptions regarding people’s capacity are integral to the facilitation of autonomy and choice in decisions. | Citizenship of people can be taken from them when there are communication problems |
|
| Research study | Recognition that different people have different styles of communication and show different levels of participation | Care providers can play a supportive role in facilitating the communication of people living with dementia. | |||
| 23. | Participation of people living with dementia framed as “claiming their rightful place in the broader community” (p. 390) | Simultaneous focus on recognizing people’s vulnerability and diminished capacity, as well as their dignity and respect | Emphasis on the importance of finding ways to prioritize both safety and free/autonomous participation of people living with dementia | Focus on resistance of labelling persons as
having a dementia diagnosis. | Focus on shared social identity |
| 24. | Focus on representation: making decisions on behalf of others in their best interests | Challenges the notion of cognitive capacity as a prerequisite for includability in democratic participation | Challenges “ableist biases on autonomy and decision-making capacity” (p. 331) | Exclusion of people with dementia violates the principles of democratic citizenship, including equality, representation, participation, and inclusion |
|
| Conceptual paper | Political approach to conceptualizing citizenship | The participation of people living with dementia in a democracy depends on the support of others, especially in the later stages of dementia | |||
| 25. | Addresses how relationships with family carers may foster or impede one’s sense of self as a full citizen when living with dementia. | Self-management groups for people with dementia provide spaces that help maintain people’s voices and position them as actively participating in their own lives. | People living with dementia should play a key
role in decision-making | Emphasis on ensuring that people living with dementia do not feel marginalized and that their voices are heard | Recognized that ‘one size does not fit all’. Approaches to facilitating citizenship must consider the person living with dementia as an individual |
| Research study | The relationship dynamic between people living with dementia and their care partner could influence their ability to exercise citizenship | Repositioning people living with dementia as individuals with experiential expertise helps challenge the notion of people as passive actors and recast them as learners, knowers, and teachers | In group work, some separation between those living with dementia and care partners may be important to create a safe and empowering space of solidarity and belonging for people living with dementia | Peer support helps frame stigma as a shared experience, suggesting that people living with dementia are not alone in their experiences | |
| 26. | Shift from focus on individual experience to the socio-political forces | Social structures can facilitate or inhibit people’s agency | Challenges deficit-focused narratives that strip people of their autonomy and exclude them from decision-making. | Challenges the exclusion of people living with dementia from participation in social practices | Social roles and statuses change as people move along the dementia trajectory |
| Conceptual paper | Participation of people living with dementia should be recognized and acknowledged through the action of others | Citizenship must consider both the active and passive forms of agency that people with severe dementia may display | Focus on support in enabling “purposeful contribution to decisions” (p. 206) | How cultures frame dementia could result in challenges to people’s autonomy and lead to stigma and exclusion | Focus on people’s management of disclosure of dementia diagnosis to facilitate control in social situations and continuity of social roles |
| 27. | Focus on sociocultural assumptions and structural inequalities as forces that shape citizenship | Challenges previous deficit-focused positioning of people in the later stages of dementia as lacking agency or potential, which furthers the marginalization of people. | This approach challenges the ideal of independence and offers a more inclusive model grounded in vulnerability to better represent the lived experience of people in the late stages of dementia | Calls for a paradigm shift in the provision of care and services that is based not on pity but on valuing people living with dementia |
|
| Conceptual paper | Contextualizes life decisions in the context of
power relations and social values, institutions, and
practices. | Recognition of vulnerability is framed as a shared responsibility and is key in the effort to maintain agency and dignity | Challenges negative valuation of dependence, which tends to devalue and other people living with dementia in the fourth age | ||
| 28. | Examines the role of public art in facilitating social citizenship and sense of community belonging for people with dementia | Social participation and inclusion foster health, wellbeing and quality of life for people with dementia – and art in public spaces can create opportunities for people with dementia to participate in the community at large |
| Inclusive communities respect people with dementia as social citizens with rights to participation and contribution |
|
| 29. | Relationship-centred care a) includes attention to interdependence, reciprocity, and involvement of people with dementia in decision-making; b) power relations between people living with dementia and others, and, c) interpersonal influences at the micro-level, as well as macro-level factors that impinge on people’s self-expression | Embodied agency: the inherent capacity of the
body as the primary source of agency; | Shift from autonomy and individuality to
interdependence and relationality. | Stigma and discrimination pose barriers to
people’s self-expression |
|
| 30. | Considers gender differences among people living with dementia in the context of care in order to promote equality (in terms of access to resources, decision-making, roles and responsibilities) | Focus on gender differences of agency and the restrictions placed on social participation | Focus on gender differences in facilitation of autonomy by care partner | Focus on social exclusion, disablism, and inequality through the lens of gender |
|
| Scoping review | Focus on the influence of social position on the lived experience of dementia | A feminist citizenship perspective in future research could provide a framework for working towards justice and equality | |||
| 31. | Focus on recognition of dementia as disability (by expanding the definition of disability) in legal frameworks to help achieve equity and justice for people | Supporting people’s exercise of legal capacity is integral to inclusion and participation. | Supporting people’s exercise of legal capacity is integral to the maintenance of autonomy | Focus on disability discrimination and making reasonable adjustments to practices that place people living with dementia at a disadvantage and hinder their full and effective participation in society on an equal basis with others |
|
| Conceptual paper | Challenges negative perceptions of people’s competence and capacity | ||||
| 32. | Focus on relationality and reciprocity | Challenges the assumption of loss of agency due to dementia | Focus on interdependence in decision-making | Focus on elimination of stigma and discriminatory attitudes and practices in the care context |
|
| Conceptual paper | Frames people living with dementia as active partners in care relationships. | The body is framed as a source of capacity for intentional and meaningful action | |||
| 33. | Conceptualizes relational citizenship as distributed achievement from a network of relations (care-collectives) rather than viewing the individual as holding citizenship | Distribution of agency occurs through care-collectives – and this can be empowering or harmful |
|
| Focus is on care-collectives rather than on the individual |
| Research study | Regardless, it is a shared or collective achievement | ||||
| 34. | Shift from viewing citizenship solely in the context of political participation to that of engaging in everyday social practices | Frames citizenship as people’s ability to engage in social practices |
| Aspects of the lived experience of dementia are socially constructed and may result in exclusion | Citizenship is more strongly associated with personal identity than people’s sense of belonging to the community |
| Research study | Citizenship practices are located at the intersections of different (micro and meso) levels of the environment | Sense of belonging may diminish with changes in the community causing people to feel out of place | |||
| 35. | Embodied selfhood is linked to people’s social world and is, therefore, relational | Challenges the assumption of loss of agency by suggesting that the “creative and intentional capacity” (p. 718) remains preserved in the body and is not lost due to cognitive impairment | Focus on corporeality as integral to self-expression | People’s behaviour and actions could be indicators of stigmatizing care practices | Creative activities and arts-based activities in dementia care, such as dance, can facilitate expression of self for people living with dementia |
| Conceptual paper | A relational lens helps focus on reciprocal engagement | Relational lens helps focus on interdependence | Focus on counteracting assumptions about people’s capacity | Adopting this approach would facilitate “creativity, imagination, and other positive human potentialities” of people living with dementia (p. 41) | |
| 36. | Embodiment is a source of reciprocal engagement | Embodiment is a source of self-expression | Embodiment is a source of interdependence | ||
| Research study | Embodied selfhood is relational and “intertwined with [the] shared world” (p. 41) | Argues against assumptions of loss of agency in dementia by demonstrating the persistence of agency through the pre-reflective capacity of the body | |||
| 37. | Power imbalances are levelled by volunteers at a gardening program forming reciprocal relationships with people living with dementia “to collectively look out for each other, and keep people safe by getting to know and understand each other” (p. 178) | Assuming that the person has capacity rather than assuming that they are not capable, that they are able, rather than disabled. | People should have the opportunity to exercise autonomy and choice in negotiating risk | Challenges the approach of creating dementia-only programs/spaces as these further the divide between people living with dementia and the community. |
|
| Research study | Autonomy requires acknowledgement of people’s strengths and contributions | Focus on facilitating people’s autonomy and their right to freely choose to take risks; ccommunities should enable risk-taking | Instead, calls for full inclusion including spaces/services that can be used by people living with dementia and others. | ||
| 38. | Citizenship is shaped through one’s everyday interactions with one’s world. Societal attitudes shape interpersonal and personal responses to dementia in meaningful – and often negative – ways. | Focus on the right of the person living with dementia to be treated as an agent with “rights, history, and competencies” (p. 46) | Disclosure of one’s diagnosis of dementia can result in one being immediately treated as incapable but there is also power in strategically owning one’s diagnosis as a means of claiming citizenship. | Disclosing one’s diagnosis of dementia can
result in discrimination by others. | People play an active role in shaping their
social identity (by disclosing their
diagnosis). |
| Research study | Others’ perceptions of dementia may limit people’s opportunities for active participation and challenge their citizenship. | Others’ perception and assumptions about dementia may serve to limit the growth of people living with dementia. | |||
| 39. | Focus on the role of embodiment in relationality and reciprocity | Focus on (a) supporting relational and embodied capabilities of people living with dementia, and (b) embodied self-expression and pre-reflective intentionality and agency of people living with dementia | Focus on the role of embodiment in interdependence | Challenges stigmatizing perceptions of dementia (e.g., highlighting dementia and the individual as the cause of aggression) | Focus on human flourishing as a goal of dementia care. |
| Conceptual paper | Situates interpersonal relationships and interactions in the care setting within wider social, organizational, political, and institutional context | Going beyond basic physical safety and comfort in care and instead focusing on the best interests of people living with dementia | Focus not only on protection from harm but also on creating a relational care environment that supports the positive potentialities (e.g., creativity, imagination) of people living with dementia | ||
| 40. | Citizenship is realized through social participation through everyday interpersonal interactions | Focus in on deliberative/creative agency | The freedom to make decisions is central to citizenship. Changes in decision-making abilities do not imply an end to people’s involvement in decision-making (e.g., supported/substituted decision-making) | Dementia is framed as “an experience within which people face barriers [rooted in institutional and social practices] to inclusion which impact upon their day-to-day lives” (p. 297) | Interdependent relationships help reinforce the identity of people living with dementia, which in turn, contributes to citizenship |
| Research study | Relational citizenship challenges the notion of independence and the dichotomous understandings of dependence and independence | Relational citizenship focuses on maintaining interdependence and reciprocity in interpersonal relationships within domestic settings | Challenges: (a) discriminatory practices that limit people’s participation; (b) conflating diagnosis with incapacity without proper/holistic assessment | ||
| 41. | Frames mental capacity as a relational concept | Argues for presumption of capacity as a legal
right; | Decision-making capacity should not be decided solely on the basis of cognition but should also take into account the person’s interactions with others and their environment. | Recognizes the challenge of maintaining the balance between acknowledging continuity post-diagnosis and the possibility of growth and change of mind when considering decision-making | |
| Conceptual paper | Personal beliefs, values, and preferences are shaped by broader sociocultural contexts. Therefore, their influence on people’s decision-making need to be understood relationally | Advocates for an understanding of autonomy as relational | Disputes the dichotomy between dependence and independence and focuses on interdependence. | Recognizes that people living with dementia occupy different social locations and are not a homogenous group. These social locations help explicate why people respond to certain experiences a certain way | |
| People have rights even when incapable of making some decisions | Recognizes the importance of active involvement in decisions about one’s life even if not legally fully capable of making those decisions | ||||
| 42. | Partnerships with decision and policy makers needs to be authentic for advocacy to be meaningful for advocates living with dementia | Advocacy can only occur when people with dementia recognize their ability to be active citizens | Advocates living with dementia need to be meaningfully involved in decision-making | Study uses a human rights perspective to explore how people with dementia become advocates | Supporting engagement and advocacy for people with dementia acknowledges their identity as social citizens |
| Research study | Support from others (ie: organizations) is also required for opportunities for advocacy to occur | Others (planners, community partners, etc…) need to appreciate and value the contributions of people with dementia in these processes | Personal growth (building new skills such as advocacy) is an important aspect of citizenship | ||
| 43. | Draws on relational model of citizenship whereby embodiment becomes the course of relationality and self-expression | Focuses on embodied intentionality and how the body creatively engages with the world. | Arts-based programming is important for facilitation creative of -expression for people with dementia | Embodied self-expression for people with advanced dementia becomes primary way of engaging with world – this is important for supporting human rights (freedom of expression and human dignity) |
|
| Research study | The body as a source of agency | Creativity should be nurtured in all aspect of life (need for enabling environments) | |||
| 44. | Relational practices are needed in dementia and
long-term care that honour full citizenship of people with
dementia | Agency is separate from cognition – can be found in the pre-reflective body | Authors argue for a replacement of more traditional views of autonomy with one of relational autonomy (interdependence and reciprocity | Relational practices create “a more human world for persons living with memory loss” (p.1) and challenges tragedy and biomedical discourse | Stigma has contributed to “spoiled identity” |
| 45. | Draws on relational citizenship model for embodied learning and creativity | Reciprocity and interdependence promote agency | People with dementia should be active partners in their care supports | There is a need for affirming creative self-expression and having the opportunity to continue to learn and grow | Arts-based activities can affirm and reinforce identity |
| 46. | Citizenship occurs through ‘care collectives’ of various care relationships that are heterogenous and changeable networks made up of different actors | Agency as relational care practices - “a collective and distributed construction emerging from the interplay of care collectives” (p. 3) | People with dementia should be co-creators of their everyday lives – this can be facilitated within care work | Care and care work need to shift to ensure that people with dementia feel included and able to participate |
|
| 47. | Not explicitly covered | People with dementia have the right to give own consent as long as they are able to | Charter of rights challenges common assumptions of incompetence and incapability | Growing recognition of the need for a human rights approach for people with dementia |
|
| 48. | Looked at micro-citizenship interactions of patient support organizations (ie: dementia cafes, support groups, online groups, etc….) |
|
| Support organizations can support people with dementia to claim rights but the extent of that support depends on funding and resources | Patient support organizations have a role in helping people construct “citizenship identities” (that recognize age, gender, ethnicity, etc…) |
| 49. | Focus in relationship to wider societal and organizational structures | Agency can be distributed among humans and non-humans (ie: animals and technology) | Citizenship involves the “conscious sharing of responsibilities between people, technological beings, even animals…” (p12) | Access (to resources, places and opportunities) is a key element in inclusive citizenship | There is value in acknowledging a “disabled identity” |