DOI: 10.1177/00144029261461083 ISSN: 0014-4029

Relational Inclusivity as a Paradigmatic Shift: Reimagining Special Education as a Democratic and Ethical Project

Christoforos Mamas

Despite decades of inclusive education reform, special education policy and practice remain dominated by compliance-oriented logics that prioritize placement, procedural safeguards, and individual remediation, often without attending to students’ lived experiences of belonging, participation, and recognition. Drawing on historical and contemporary scholarship in inclusive education, disability studies, DisCrit, ethics of care, and social network theory, this paper advances relational inclusivity as an integrative paradigmatic reframing of special education as a democratic and ethical project. Rather than positioning relationality as a new idea, the paper situates relational inclusivity within long-standing critiques of deficit-based and individualistic models, while offering a coherent framework for operationalizing relational justice in classrooms and policy contexts. Central to this framework is the conceptualization of educators as relational architects who shape classroom social ecologies through everyday pedagogical decisions. To support this work, the paper reconceptualizes social network analysis as part of a broader critical methodological repertoire that renders visible the relational structures through which inclusion and exclusion are produced. A case illustration demonstrates how ethically grounded, reflexive uses of social network analysis can support teachers in identifying relational inequities and designing more inclusive learning communities. The paper concludes by examining implications for democratic accountability, policy reform, and future research, arguing that relational well-being must be treated as a core educational outcome rather than a peripheral concern.

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