Across all resources, disability is understood not as stemming from the individual but as a result of external barriers: physical, societal, and attitudinal. The social model of disability runs as a foundation: it is the failure of environments and systems to accommodate human variation that disables people, not any intrinsic limitation. Building on this, Ade Adepitan highlights how systemic neglect, often shaped by racism, embeds exclusion into the very structure of society, showing that ability is linked to opportunity rather than innate capacity. Christine Sun Kim deepens this view by drawing attention to how disability can also operate through cultural erasure and miscommunication, illustrating that social misunderstanding disables as much as physical inaccessibility. Shay Brown, meanwhile, focuses on the hidden aspects of disability: unspoken norms, mental health struggles, and the less visible intersections with other marginalised identities. Together, these perspectives frame disability as something socially constructed and systemically maintained, always shaped by broader forces of power and exclusion.
Inclusion is understood as a fundamental redesign of shared spaces we all share: accessibility can’t be an afterthought or an accessory, but the fundamental ethos of interaction. Adepitan insists that true inclusion requires a systemic overhaul, linking the need for accessible environments with the broader fight against racial injustice and exposing the inadequacy of temporary or separate fixes. Christine Sun Kim pushes this even further, challenging narrow definitions of accessibility by insisting on cultural access — the ability to communicate, to exist, without apology or constant translation. Through her work, she forces hearing audiences to confront the presence of Deaf culture in everyday life. Shay Brown brings a practical urgency to these ideas, stressing that accessibility must be proactively built in from the beginning: asking questions, budgeting for it, and valuing it as essential rather than optional. Across these different perspectives, a shared idea emerges: Inclusion is not about making exceptions but about fundamentally shifting how we design spaces, communities, and interactions so that everyone belongs from the start.
Disability cannot be understood in isolation. A deep awareness runs through all the speakers’ work that disability cannot be separated from other aspects of identity. Christine Sun Kim shows how her Deafness is inseparable from cultural and linguistic identity, revealing how access to language and culture is as critical as access to physical spaces. Her experiences of belonging and alienation within both Deaf and hearing worlds point to identity’s layered, complex nature. Overlapping, shifting experiences of privilege and marginalisation characterise spaces that might appear or claim to be inherently inclusive. Brown amplifies this understanding, emphasising on how disability intertwines with gender, sexuality, neurodivergence. Their perspectives dismantle notions that disability can be comprehended in isolation, painting a picture of identity as dynamic, multifaceted, and constantly shaped by broader systems of power and belonging. Adepitan highlights how race and disability intersect through shared patterns of invisibility and exclusion. Systemic oppression operates along multiple axes at once.
Disability as a structural force is ingrained both structurally and relationally. UAL data shows that around 20% of students declare a disability, learning difference, or mental health condition, and many more are likely undiagnosed. Starting from the assumption that disability is present even when invisible, I design my approach to be proactively inclusive rather than reactively accommodating. Christine Sun Kim’s reflections on her academic journey resonate strongly here: she highlights how many learning opportunities were denied to her because pedagogy and institutional design were inaccessible to a Deaf student. In line with universal design principles, I ensure that accessibility is not treated as an add-on but as an embedded standard. When tools are offered to everyone, they avoid singling out any student; they normalise access, reduce stigma, and allow needs to remain private if students wish. Non-stigmatising tools are essential, especially given how many disabilities are invisible, undiagnosed, or disclosed only selectively.
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