Abstract
Q: Why is it important that people with learning disabilities tell their stories? A: I think it's to let other people know what's happened to them and make it aware of people so that it doesn't happen. People doesn't go around hurting other people, it's not fair. So I think if they write their story it makes people aware, because years ago it wasn't aware of people with learning disability because they were put away. So now it's time for people with learning disability to write their story and to let other people know. (Cooper 2008 online). Mabel Cooper, former resident St Lawrence's Hospital, self-advocate, broadcaster and founder member of the Open University's Social History of Learning Disability Group. 1 This book's title – Communities, archives and new collaborative practices – raises the question of who or what is collaborating. The reading of the title most immediately available might be that the collaboration is between communities and those that work in archives. Yet we want to focus on another type of collaboration here, one which is equally crucial in developing new collaborative practices for archives. In a recent action research project to develop an Inclusive Archive of Learning Disability History 2 it became clear that in seeking to produce an archive we needed to conceive of collaboration not only in terms of people but also in terms of a collaboration between different political theories. In developing the Inclusive Archive we recognised we needed to seek a collaborative relationship between the political ideas derived from public political logics – public service, public sphere, 'on behalf of the public' and for posterity – and those that derive from relational and personal-centred politics. While there was constant debate in the team, with some of us favouring one set of political logic and some the other, we realized that for an archive to be an archive, and for it to be an inclusive one, we needed to develop an approach to archival practice which held both the public and the relational political traditions in dialogue. Both political traditions have a history of being very effectively expressed in the learning disability self-advocacy movement as speaking up and being heard and of arguing for services to start with the individual by being more 'person-centered' (Brownlee et al. 2017). The task of our archive was to explore fruitful combinations and collaborations between the two political traditions.