Litcius/Paper detail

Living Disability Theory: Reflections on Access, Research, and Design

Megan Hofmann, Devva Kasnitz, Jennifer Mankoff, Cynthia L. Bennett

2020176 citationsDOI

Abstract

Accessibility research and disability studies are intertwined fields focused on, respectively, building a world more inclusive of people with disability and understanding and elevating the lived experiences of disabled people. Accessibility research tends to focus on creating technology related to impairment, while disability studies focuses on understanding disability and advocating against ableist systems. Our paper presents a reflexive analysis of the experiences of three accessibility researchers and one disability studies scholar. We focus on moments when our disability was misunderstood and causes such as expecting clearly defined impairments. We derive three themes: ableism in research, oversimplification of disability, and human relationships around disability. From these themes, we suggest paths toward more strongly integrating disability studies perspectives and disabled people into accessibility research.

Topics & Concepts

AbleismDisability studiesReflexivityDisabled peopleMedical model of disabilityFocus (optics)Social model of disabilityDisability discriminationUniversal designFocus groupSociologyPsychologyGender studiesComputer scienceApplied psychologyPolitical scienceSocial scienceWorld Wide WebOpticsPhysicsLife styleLawAnthropologyPsychiatryAssistive Technology in Communication and MobilityDisability Rights and RepresentationTechnology Use by Older Adults
Living Disability Theory: Reflections on Access, Research, and Design | Litcius