The researcher integrated her previous postdoctoral research on identity with the life story work literature through completing the book Deaf epistemologies, identity, and learning (Gallaudet University Press, 2016) and producing chapters for two edited volumes, Innovative Therapeutic Life Story Work (Jessica Kingsley, 2017), this book is published and the chapter is deposited in the University's institutional repository and available via open access. The second chapter is in press and due to be published in 2018, in the book Deaf Identities: Exploring New Frontiers (Oxford University Press, 2018). Further publications are planned. The publications all acknowledge the funding received from the Marie Sklodowska Curie Individual Fellowship and are either available or will be made available via open access.
Since DLSW is new, and it was the first time the host group worked with deaf migrants and refugees, the Experienced Researcher (ER) first introduced the study to social work, mental health services, and migrant/refugee organisations; this supported the application for ethical approval in March 2016. The project received approval from the Manchester Research Ethics Committee in June 2016, after which signed translations were made of the call for participants, information sheets and consent forms.
Data collection started in October 2016, with a sample of eight deaf participants aged 20 to 50, seven of whom arrived in the UK at various ages across a span of 40 years. Four to eight sessions were offered, lasting three hours each, enabling the ER to optimise her approach according to participants’ language competences, providing them with the opportunity to develop a coherent life story and find meaning in it.
The ER undertook professional training at the University of East London, organised by the Institute of Arts in Therapy and Education, earning a Diploma in Therapeutic Life Story Work. An ESRC IAA (Impact Acceleration Account) grant, entitled ‘The right of each deaf young person and adult to tell his/her life story: a new intervention to enrich deaf wellbeing’, enabled the ER to collaborate with IATE to co-write a DLSW manual that operationalises the findings and guides service providers’ interventions with deaf young people and adults. It will also support future training and research.