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How different countries approach assisted dying ****Opposition to assisted dying in Scotland.**** May 2025. Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images. Dear Debriefers, The subject of assisted dying is emotionally complex and can quickly become dystopian. For many, it is disturbing and dangerous, seen as a slippery slope to becoming a state-sanctioned eugenics programme. But at the same time as parts of the disability movement protest against assisted dying, other disabled people have been at the forefront of demanding access to it. Indeed, the rapid expansion of assisted dying in Canada came about after a campaign by two disabled people to expand eligibility of those who could qualify for it. I’m writing this article as an academic who’s been studying questions around how we die for many years. I have had a temporary experience of disability (thanks long Covid) but I’m not a disabled person. And in this piece I don’t take a position for or against assisted dying. Rather, I share the way different countries approach assisted dying, and the issues raised in the national debates around it, ongoing in several European countries. Examining these alongside the words of the people most affected, we can see the fundamental questions of dignity and autonomous choice that the subject of assisted dying raises. ## About this edition **Joe Wood** is a researcher focusing on how we talk about pain, grief and loss, particularly at the end of life. **Disability Debrief is a****reader-supported****publication.** Thanks to Claire for a new contribution. **This article also had support** from the Assisted Lab project at the University of St Gallen. Assisted Lab looks at the impact of stories we tell about assisted dying, and does not take a position for or against it. Sign-up for a disability lens on world news Subscribe Email sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup. Weekly in your inbox ## “Is it too easy to die in Canada?” Canada has become an international reference point for its loose rules about who can access assisted dying and the speed at which eligibility has been opened up. Less than a decade after legalisation, over 4% of Canadian deaths now occur through Medical Aid in Dying (MAiD). From initial legalisation in 2016, assisted dying has been mainstreamed within the healthcare service. In 2021 eligibility was extended to include non-terminal conditions such as some disabilities. And it’s scheduled to be extended again to certain mental illnesses in 2027. A recent documentary critiquing MAiD is, perhaps rightly, titled ‘Is it too easy to die in Canada?’. There’s a 24/7 phoneline and people can be helped to die within a week or two of requesting it. Both Canada and the US State of California legalised forms of MAiD in 2016. They have similar population sizes, but in 2022, more than 15 times more Canadians died via MAiD than Californians. ## Assistance to die, but not to live When the UN sent a special rapporteur to explore the Canadian approach to disability rights in 2019, she was “extremely concerned” about the way MAiD risked covering up for an “absence of community-based alternatives and palliative care”. People have ended their lives through MAiD for issues like hearing loss or self-neglect during an episode of mental illness. Others appear to have pursued MAiD because they cannot afford adequate long-term care or secure social housing. There are several reports of disabled people having MAiD suggested to them by carers and medical professionals. This has happened even when they weren’t previously considering it and what they really needed were better care packages. As former Paralympian Christine Gauthier puts it, “Are you serious? Like that easy, you're going to be helping me to die but you won't help me to live?”. The system is currently being challenged in the courts by disability campaigners, and others are appealing for the right to MAiD-free treatment spaces (clinics or hospitals where MAiD isn’t available and won’t ever be suggested). ## The slippery slope Canada appears to be a real-life example of the slippery slope scenario that many fear when assisted dying laws are discussed. The slippery slope is the idea that after initial legalisation the number and scope of assisted deaths will only increase. This possibility is particularly a concern for disabled people who have learned to mistrust the medical profession and question society’s intentions towards them more generally. Making disability a legally valid reason to request to end your life is disturbing because it calls into question the value of disabled lives. And the end result of expanding access to assisted dying can seem to be a state-sanctioned eugenics programme. The Canadian model is loosely based on the laws of the Netherlands which follows a similar story. Dutch law initially aimed at preventing suffering in people who were very close to death. But it is now used by older people and those without terminal conditions. (An important difference though is that, before legalisation in 2002, Dutch police had rarely prosecuted doctors for euthanasia since high-profile cases in the 1970s.) Uptake of assisted dying can also increase even if the law stays the same. In the Netherlands there was a 20% increase in assisted deaths for purely psychological reasons in 2023 (albeit the numbers remain small). In the same year, Belgium also saw a 15% increase in euthanasia cases. ## Eligibility and how it can expand One of the factors that makes the slope slippery is the criteria used when legislating for assisted dying. Recent Spanish law focuses on people who are experiencing “serious, chronic and impossible suffering or serious and incurable illness” (Translation, as are many following quotes.) Dutch law hinges on “hopeless and unbearable suffering”. Definitions like these are much more open to interpretation and widening of who they may include. Advocates for the bill currently going through the UK parliament point out that the proposed law is restricted to people with six months or less to live (following the model of US States like Oregon). This is a specific and limited eligibility, and indeed would include less than half of Brits who travel to Switzerland for an assisted death. Canada’s example shows why clarity matters. The first iteration of the law only specified that a person’s death had to be “reasonably foreseeable”. But terms like this, or the word “terminal”, are always arguable. In Canada, the phrase “reasonably foreseeable” ended up leaving the door open for broader eligibility criteria in the future. Given the context of assisted dying in Canada today, I was amazed to learn that it was actually a campaign by two disabled people which brought about the controversial 2019 Truchon Decision, which expanded the criteria of access. The Truchon Decision ruled it was against the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to limit MAiD to only those at the “end of life”. Following that, MAiD was extended in 2020 with eligibility criteria now requiring applicants to have “a grievous and irremediable medical condition”, which is far more flexible terminology. ## “The question of how to accommodate vulnerability” Many disability groups, like this Spanish cerebral palsy charity, want the wording of laws in their countries to be more specific, or limited to those who are terminally ill and actively dying. As disability activist Marc Henri d'Alès puts it, when describing concerns with the current debate in France: > “Even though I am not at the end of my life, I feel concerned by the bill, because in reality, it raises the question of how to accommodate vulnerability in our lives and how society as a whole views dependent people.” Vague criteria in assisted dying laws can equate disability with terminal illness and encourage the idea that living with disability is always enough to request assisted dying. However, despite its controversial rollout, some disabled Canadians still actively support MAiD. This diversity of opinion raises further questions around agency and social attitudes to disability. On both sides of the assisted dying debate is the importance of being able to decide for yourself whether your own life is worth living. ## Ableism and devaluing disabled lives For some, assisted dying re-enforces a medical model of disability and represents a decision made by others that disabled lives are worthless. Indeed, as we saw in Canada, this can be seen in terms of the lack of support available for disabled people to live full lives. For instance, in France, blogger and disability sex therapist Laetitia Rebord initially supported the right for someone to choose an assisted death. But then she realised the reason for her opinion: > “My internalized ableism had already strongly developed […] ever since I’d heard my grandfather openly declare, on several occasions, that in my situation, he would shoot himself.” Rebord now campaigns against assisted dying, believing it perpetuates the ableism she experiences in everyday life and that it could lead to people like her grandad exercising subtle forms of coercion and influence. Prominent French anti-assisted dying campaigner Celine Extenso agrees, quoting the eligibility criteria in discussions around the law: > ‘When our access to housing, transportation, education, work, leisure, family life and even the most basic care is legally obstructed every day, who would not experience "refractory psychological suffering"?’ [“refractory” means not responsive to treatment] Increasing legalisation of assisted dying without great leaps in care and provision for disabled people is surely unfair. Many reckon assisted dying might even be an economic decision. As Spanish disability commentator Alberto de Pinto Benito puts it: “It is much easier to kill a person than to support them with benefits.” And as German disability blogger Marianne Karner writes, “There is no such thing as an undignified life. What does exist are undignified circumstances”. ## “It should be a right” Yet having the right to assess your own life’s worth is also the point made by those who want the right to die.**** Take the prominent case of Vincent Humbert in France (where assisted dying isn’t currently legal). A car crash made him paraplegic and he lost his sight and speech. Humbert was supported by his mother and his doctor to pursue an illegal assisted death in 2003. His decision became a cultural reference point in French debates as a symbol of self-determination. Similarly, Dutch blogger Lauren Hoeve died through euthanasia in Jan 2024 having lived for several years with ME as well as autism and ADHD. She reached the point of feeling that she was no longer able to live in a way that she recognised or identified with, writing: > “I cannot force anyone to help me die, but I do believe that a dignified, self-chosen (but well-considered) end of life should be a right.” Humbert’s or Hoeve’s decisions may have been affected by systemic ableism or their own prejudices. But the experiences that led them to end their lives were real for them. And so, although it is disturbing, it also feels like they claimed agency through their decisions. A similar (and, for me, just as unsettling) argument for assisted dying is made on the basis of “completed life” for people who feel they’ve done all they want do to in life and see no point continuing. This case is often associated with older people who fear ill health or boredom in their final years. It is already legal in certain circumstances in Switzerland and the Benelux countries. ## “I’d rather go out with dignity” Beyond the question of life’s ongoing worth, for many assisted dying comes down specifically to the issue of autonomy over end-of-life scenarios. In France, the law currently being considered has been heavily influenced by writer turned campaigner Anne Bert, who lived with ALS. In 2017, she travelled to die in Belgium. Bert’s decision was based on autonomy. She didn’t want to be “at the mercy of others” and wanted to choose the timing and manner of her death to avoid the long painful death she anticipated her condition would lead to. Belgian law, which legalised euthanasia in 2002, was itself effectively changed through the similar campaigns of Jean-Marie Lorand. The relative openness in Switzerland and Belgium allows foreign nationals to come from outside the country to seek an assisted death. For example, Sabine travelled to Belgium to die aged 56. Having lived with complications from chronic arthritis since the age of five, she said: > “I’ve taken back control of my life. I’ve chosen how it’s going to end. I’d rather go out with dignity, in peace and quiet surrounded by my family, than in hospital, prodded all over.” Bert and Sabine had enough money to make the trip over the border to Belgium. But others can feel forced to end their lives through improvised means. This option can be more lonely and less likely to work. In this light, some see legalising assisted dying as a matter of equity because anyone should be able to access the same standard of assistance in their own country. ## Autonomy and agency in different administrations Switzerland, often seen as the home of assisted suicide, is kind of a special case. Assisted suicide was legalised in Switzerland in 1941 and the law has been in regular use since the 1980s. But the service is performed through co-op associations of active supporters. Doctors are still involved, but the process is led by a not-for-profit organisation rather than standard medical institutions. This is unlike most other countries – like Canada, Belgium or Australia – which run their assisted dying programmes through the healthcare system. There are also grey areas in some countries where assisted dying isn’t officially allowed. For example, in Austria, Colombia and Italy, doctors aren’t technically allowed to help patients die, but there is precedent that they are unlikely to be prosecuted in certain circumstances. And in some places, like the UK or Sweden, “passive euthanasia” – refusing treatment or stopping life-support – is a legal option. Countries also differ in who carries out the procedure. In Switzerland, the person has to administer the drugs themselves. In the Netherlands or Canada, a medical professional will most likely administer them. Some of these differences may appear to be technicalities. But they have important consequences in terms of who has the capacity to decide and/or to administer their own drugs. And they also have a symbolic importance in terms of the autonomy that lies behind an individual’s decision. ## “No one lives completely autonomously” For me, these questions of capacity and how we use it lie at the heart of assisted dying. We should certainly have a level of autonomy over our own life and consequently our death, but I’m not so sure that our own sense of autonomy is particularly objective. In the words of Austrian politician and disabled activist Franz-Joseph Huainigg, writing about autonomy: > “We must be clear that no one lives completely autonomously and that we influence each other - including in decision-making.” And there is definitely a tension between allowing certain people to exercise their autonomy and looking after marginalised members of society. Celine Extenso opposes the current legislation being considered in France, but seems to look towards a time when better provision for disabled people might change her mind when she says: > “In an ideal world, where disabled people would be helped to live with dignity, assisted dying would be a given.” ## Reaching other feelings Discussions on assisted dying often assume that we can make a final decision about whether we want to carry on living. But what is often missing in the debate is the fact that many people who pursue an assisted death don’t actually go through with it. Nicole Gladu was one of the two disabled people who successfully changed Canada’s law on assisted dying to include disabled people in 2020. But in the end she didn’t access MAiD and died of natural causes in 2022. I want to leave you with this article about Romy, a young Dutch woman with trauma and addiction issues who wanted an assisted death. After years of failed therapy and treatment, she was approved for the procedure. Romy said goodbye to everyone, but, at the final moment when she was asked again whether she was sure, she changed her mind. It may seem counterintuitive, but once approved for an assisted death, some people can relax and carry on with life. The centre that treated Romy claims 40% of patients with psychological distress withdraw their requests after discussions with the centre’s professionals. And some “are so focused on euthanasia that they can only reach other feelings after the ‘green light’”. Romy herself is undergoing therapy and is optimistic: “I survived death, so I'll survive life too.” ## Conclusion Assisted dying is a topic that can confuse and terrify and, for some, console. I know that for me it brings up a whole set of emotions and can be challenging to research for long periods of time. What for one person is the option of a deeply private act of autonomy is, for another person, a disturbing challenge to their very existence. But as more countries join the road to legalisation, it feels increasingly important to understand the complexity of what’s at stake. It’s a hard subject to read and write about, so thanks for reading to the end. All the best, Joe ## Further Reading Check out the Assisted Lab’s website for recommendations of books, films etc. from different sides of the politics debates around assisted dying. If we’ve not covered it, you can also share an important story or piece you’ve come across. The Disability Debrief library has curated links on Assisted Dying and Euthanasia. And for more general information on the legal situation on assisted dying: * BBC News, What is assisted dying and how could the law change? (regularly updated, including details of the current situation in UK law and differences between assisted dying, assisted suicide and euthanasia) * British Medical Association, Physician assisted dying legislation around the world, 2022 (a few years old now but still a useful map) * Luke Hurst and Camille Bello, Euthanasia in Europe: Where is assisted dying legal?, euronews, 2022 ## Outro **Let your friends know**. Sharing the newsletter is how people find it! **See more from Joe:** his book Cicely Saunders and Total Pain: Holism, Narrative and Silence at the End of Life. **Help us do more**. The Debrief is free thanks to reader support. ## Acknowledgements Thanks to my colleagues at Assisted Lab who encouraged me to write this article, especially Vanessa Rampton and Anna Elsner for their trust and support. Thanks to Peter for leading me through writing an article for the Debrief with perspicacity and good humour, both much needed when writing about this topic. Thanks to Celestine Fraser for reviewing an earlier version of this piece. Thanks to the organisations and readers (including you) who support the Debrief so it can share the stories that matter. Part of my time on this essay was supported by Assisted Lab, where I was a researcher. That research was supported by an H2020 European Research Council grant (101040399) and funded by the Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation under contract MB22.00067. And photograph by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images.

Dignity, autonomous choice, and the slippery slope

11.03.2026 12:57 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Together as a collective force Dear Debriefers, This edition opens the Debrief mailbag. Responses to the reader survey show the profile of Debrief readers along with congratulations and concerns. And in reactions to recent editions, there's rehab gone wrong, anti-authoritarianism, and reacting to being an outsider... ## About this edition **Disability Debrief holds a space for community thanks to****support from readers****.** Thanks to Andrew, Maria and Zora for new contributions. **Peter Torres Fremlin** is editor of Disability Debrief and is from the UK. **Kinanty Andini** is an illustrator and digital artist from Indonesia. Sign-up for a disability lens on world news Subscribe Email sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup. Weekly in your inbox ## Together as a collective force **With thanks to the Debriefers that filled out the reader survey.** I appreciate your kind words about my and contributors work, and hearing how the Debrief plays a role in your personal and professional lives. Readers appreciated the variety of stories and geographies, how it “broadens perspectives on disability topics”, and that they “never know what to expect”. While some found the content discouraging, many responded to share the hope they took from the Debrief. For example, Aayushee appreciates: > “Stories from far-flung corners of the world binding us together as a collective force, stories that breathe hope, determination and above all vulnerability ushering into a progressive era for persons with disabilities as a whole.“ ## Profile of Debrief readers The survey this year had 40 respondents, which is a bit less than 1% of those that get the Debrief each week. Of the respondents: **68% said they were disabled people** , 15% don't, and 10% say it's complicated. This is an increase from the survey I did in 2024, where 49% identified as disabled. **43% do work or study very related to disability** , 28% sometimes related. (Similar levels to 2024). **56% are women** , 21% men, 12% non-binary. The remainder (11%) had other gender identities or preferred not to respond. ## Relevant stories to tell **Most respondents found the Debrief's strength to be its wide variety of topics and perspectives.** However, some felt that stories about individuals are too specific. Art Blaser, for example, shared a concern about “personal stories that ignore global inequity”. As Editor, I push writers to share themselves in their writing. First, personal stories and perspectives have a power to move us. Second, disability is a profoundly individual experience and, for me, our experiences shed light on global inequities. This is how the Debrief puts a disability lens on world news: grounding the news in our lived experiences. **One reader asked what is the guiding purpose of the Debrief.** This has evolved quite a bit since the project started in 2020 as a monthly curation of resources for colleagues working on disability policy. Today it is more ambitious: to tell disability stories in new ways, by combining lived experience, research, and original reporting. And, at the same time, to be a platform for us to learn and do this more creatively, with even more diverse voices. **Respondents encouraged the Debrief to keep stretching its range**. Alongside topics like artificial intelligence, readers suggested future coverage could bring out more Black stories, gender-related intersections and others. Alexander asked how the Debrief can share the stories of those “who have relevant stories to tell but are themselves unable to write?” ## The Debrief behind-the-scenes **One reader asked if the Debrief publishes more men than women**. Most Debrief articles are written by me, a man. But of all the writers, 60% are women, 28% men, 12% non-binary or other gender. **Laurel asked if I compile the Debrief myself or if there's a team.** I work full-time on the Debrief but I steadily count on a wider range of collaborations. This edition alone has behind-the-scenes support from Celestine Fraser, illustration from Kinanty Andini, quotes from fifteen readers and feedback from many more. (Not to mention the other writers and artists previously featured.) **Most respondents (60%) felt the Debrief length was “just right”**. A further 25% found it long, but could navigate it. I hope the introduction and sectioning help with this, and please don't feel obliged to read all of every edition! **However, a minority (10%) does find the Debrief too long.** And one reader commented: > “Length of text can feel overwhelming to navigate especially to someone with a learning disability - would appreciate exploring more page breaks or dynamic accessible formats.” Last year I did a trial-run of what it would look like to have Easy Read editions to offer a more accessible version for people with learning disabilities. Unfortunately it turned out to need more time resources than initially thought, so I paused the trial for now. In the meantime I would appreciate any suggestions for dynamic accessible formats. And going now to responses to specific Debrief articles... ## Rehabilitation gone wrong “Ready?” by Rachel Litchman **Rachel Litchman shared how****for-profit rehabilitation left her more disabled****than when she arrived.** In Disability Thinking Weekly, Andrew Pulrang reflected on what goes wrong with rehabilitation: > “This is an exceptionally well-written account of rehabilitation gone wrong. Or, is it really rehab as designed that is inherently, fundamentally wrong? > > “That's the question that keeps coming up for me every time I read horror stories of any kind of institutional care or program – like the Oklahoma nursing facility story linked in last Thursday's newsletter. > > “In this _Disability Debrief_ story, I can see evidence of both built-in, systemic ableism and more or less individual stupidity. I also see way too much reliance on a single orientation or attitude towards rehabilitation. There seems to be no recognition that different injuries and disabilities call for different goals and approaches. > > “And different _personalities_ call for different attitudes and philosophies, too. Some people respond well to written goals and rah-rah positivity. They really do! But some people just aren't wired that way. They, (or rather we), need a little more gallows humor, more gentle empathy, and maybe more limited goals, at least in the short term. > > “Rehabilitation can still serve a genuinely useful purpose for disabled people. But it seems like all too often it's run by people who are woefully under-prepared, and with too many other priorities that have little or nothing to do with what disabled people actually need.” ## Inherently anti-authoritarian **Gabor Petri's essay showed how democratic backsliding****erodes disability rights****.** Teodor Mladenov shared how the same issues affect independent living movements in particular: > “The Independent Living movement - as part of the broader disability rights movement - is strongly affected by illiberalism. Obviously, when 'democratic backsliding' discredits human rights, this directly harms Independent Living advocacy, which foregrounds and relies on the human rights approach to disability and the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (particularly Articles 12 and 19). > > “Moreover, Independent Living represents one of the most critical and direct-action-oriented parts of disability activism - and, as Gabor points out in his Disability Debrief article and academic research, being critical and protesting are suppressed under illiberal regimes. > > “And on the practical level, Independent Living organisations suffer from funding cuts, themselves justified by ableist victim-blaming, anti-DEI and anti-NGO campaigns. Ultimately, Independent Living is about freedom, self-direction, and having a voice - so, it is inherently anti-authoritarian.” ## Deafness with such loud terror Tharā and Cerberus, by Kinanty Andini **Tharā Gabriel shared her journey with****unrelenting tinnitus****.** That brought responses from many readers sharing their own trials with tinnitus, including Michelle Regier: > “I'm a musician and highly sensitive person with tinnitis and partial hearing loss. This is the first time I've seen those sensations explained in such a powerful way. Amazing writing by Tharā Gabriel.” And the article gave Alexander Ogheneruemu a new view on deafness: > “So it isn't all about silence! This one presents deafness with such loud terror as I never imagined... I'm left asking if deaf is the right term for it. > > “Sending strength to everyone out there struggling with one _kudrrrrrrrrrculeloooo_ or the other.” ## Years at the restaurant **Alex Ogheneruemu wrote about his own journey and the****Deaf community in Nigeria****.** He shared how in years of isolation, reading gave inspiration for the future. Mario commented: > “An eye-opening read. It frustrates me that even in the world of Deaf communities things like corruption are still so pervasive. > > “Thank you for sharing your story Alex. I’d also be interested to know what works of literature you found inspiring and influential?” Alex responds to describe his reading: > “For me self-helps, memoirs, biographies or rising above obstacles to succeed provided inspirational fire/drive. They were my stay during those years at the restaurant.” ## Contrary to convention ****A Mad Pride protest in Paris**** , France. October 2025. Photo by Louise Canguilhem/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images. **I shared news of****Mad Pride protests****in France.** Fabien didn't understand what was meant by “mad”, as it can encompass many things. Here's a definition of mad identity from Madness Network News: > ‘**Mad** : A term historically used to oppress people who experience emotional distress and non-normative or non-conventional states of being. Mad has been reclaimed as a socio-political identity for people who experience emotional distress and/or who have been labeled as “mentally ill” or as having “mental health issues.” A mad individual is a person whose identity and selfhood are contrary to convention, subverting, defying, disrupting, and liberating oneself from what is considered “sane.” To be mad is to take pride in the mental states that have been deemed criminal and deficit.’ ## Part of the global voice **I wrote about how the United Nations****hasn't done enough****on disability.** Bosswell Mboozi of the Chikankata Ngangula Disabled Farmers Association in Zambia asked who was getting left out: > “To what extent has the voice of a rural disabled person been brought on board to be part of the global voice? It's crystal that many NGOs working in rural areas have no disability tailored programme. As such rural disabled people remain invisible and continue to suffer generational poverty and exclusion from the development agenda.” ## “Grounded in shared leadership” “Come and see your sister”, by Athenkosi Kwinana **“I.K.” Ero questioned leadership styles after****leaving the advocacy frontlines**. Bailey Grey picked up on previous discussions of community organising to reflect on the type of leadership that is needed: > “Yet more evidence that a genuine community organising approach is what is needed - grounded in shared leadership, relationship building, and leadership approaches that empower members of the community and transform the power dynamics. The collaborative (or feminist) model is relational & constructive, where power is seen as expanding and limitless and has a structure that empowers, supports, and cares for all. [...] I think the answer lies in building capacity on the right model. We also need to integrate this into the support network of OPDs (INGOs, networks, donors, etc). Thanks for sharing this piece & for facilitating discourse on this tricky topic.” And Katri Bertam summarises one of the questions of the article raises: > “Why do so many leaders, when gaining and then trying to stay in power, take on a “King-of-the-Hill” (or “Queen-of-the-Hill”) leadership style? In short: go on a lonely ego crusade that leaves behind staff and partnerships - and most often impact. I love this article so much.” ## Reacting to being an outsider **Mario Georgiou wrote about****falling for Budapest****,** sharing how he moved country with a progressive disability and found a new attitude to risk. Father Fremlin asked if this echoed my own experience of travel and over a decade living outside of the UK. Growing up in the UK I often felt myself an outsider: partly because of my disability, but also my personality too. Travelling and language-learning let me explore not-belonging creatively and gain a freedom to ask questions and connect in new ways. The results were similar to those in Mario's life: my disability experience contributed to me changing my life's blueprint. When I met people in Egypt or Bangladesh they would often attribute my strange behaviour to me being British. In my head I thought, “you should see what British people think of me”. ## Without sinking into the morass Tumbling in time, by Kinanty Andini **I took a****disabled look back at 2025****,** on global shifts as well as my own year.**** Adrienne responded: > “Thank you for this wrap-up. Your writing, your thoughts and Kinanty Andini's drawings allowed me to review the horrors without sinking into the morass. > > “I really appreciate that you included your personal stuff. Back in the day, we feminists said, ‘The personal is political’. We meant it but as I've moved more into bureaucratic spaces I say less and less about my own life. And, I've been less human as a result. As usual, you are a role model for me.” ## The hope we can have **Debrief readers shared their vision of a****future where disability rights were real****.** Tina Minkowitz particularly appreciated maitreya's vision of a Bengaluru recovering amid the ruins: > “Resonates with how we feel in the US right now. The kind of hope we can have when things are being broken.” Here's to hope, Peter ## Outro **Further reading**. There is a back catalogue of Debrief newsletters online, as well as a library of disability news from 170+ countries. **Let your friends know**. Sharing the newsletter is how people find it! **For more from Kinanty,** see her website. **Connect**. Get in touch. You can find me on Linkedin and Bluesky. **Help us do more**. The Debrief is free thanks to reader support. ## Acknowledgements Thanks to Kinanty Andini for the cute cover illustration. And to Kinanty, Rachel Litchman, and Athenkosi Kwinana for other illustrations. Mad Pride photo by Louise Canguilhem/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images.. Thanks to Celestine Fraser for help processing survey responses and review of previous drafts. And thanks to all of you Debriefers for being in touch! And as always thanks to the readers and organisations whose support makes this project possible.

Debrief readers, relevant stories, and more from the mailbag

04.03.2026 18:23 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Roots of belonging At the table, together, by Sonaksha. _Wapendwa_ Debriefers, I am Nyuki Msimulizi, Storyteller Bee, buzzing back from Tanzania. I work in special education and write under a pseudonym so I can share our stories more freely. This piece is about my students with disabilities and their families’ experiences of navigating the strengths and violence of our cultures. As well as belonging and spiritual grounding, there is also harm inflicted by culture in the guise of “correcting” differences. It’s also a very personal piece. I live with mental health challenges and I too have lived through some of these harsh cultural practices. Nobody in my school knows I share this reality with my students. I write to break the silence, albeit quietly. We as educators – together with schools, families and our communities – can cause harm, or be complicit in it, even under the intention of love, care and faith. ## About this edition **Original writing like this is made possible by****support from readers****.** Thanks to Christopher, Federico and Lucy for new contributions. **Nyuki Msimulizi** is a special education teacher writing anonymously from Tanzania. **Sonaksha** is an illustrator and designer from India. Sign-up for a disability lens on world news Subscribe Email sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup. Weekly in your inbox ## A child they do not understand We meet in a small room with two wooden office desks. On one side sits our school admin team and on the other side sit the parents or guardians. Parents come worried and prepared to defend their child or their parenting. They share their pains in raising a child they do not understand. I sit in these meetings with a pen and a diary. I start by documenting the meeting. Yet as the parent shares more information, I move from documenting to blankly staring. I scribble empty lines, break pen tops, and perfect the empty nod of sympathy. The meetings end with both us admins and the parent reflecting on how we will try our best. Internally, we each place the blame on the other. ## Outrage I wish we could stop pretending sympathy. I want to share my outrage. I am outraged at how we so easily accept and become accomplices of the cultural war against my students' rights to be as they are. The cultural war is waged from the norms our society has set: on how we move, how we sit, and what we accomplish at what age. Cultural compliance is enforced by shame, guilt, and “healers” for the outcasts who do not fit these norms. ## Fighting for a place in society I fight daily for a place in this society for my students, and I work hard to ensure the world knows my students are fighting it too. But in my own brain, I have often lost this fight. I too have internalized the cultural expectations and waged this war against myself through my internal chatter. I teach my students to be bold warriors against any mistreatment, to find their own place in our culture. But I'm not able to do that in my own case. I’ve sat quietly in different rooms as my parents paraded me to “healers” in their quest to heal my temporary lapses in “sanity”. I wish I could afford myself the same courage that I can hold for my students. ## Firm Roots of Belonging Culture, beliefs and traditions hold a lot of significance and influence in Tanzania. Rituals, morals and spiritual guidance have given me firm roots of belonging. Cultural rules have given me a guide on how to behave: no shoes indoors; and adults are greeted respectfully, with words like “shikamoo”. Our morals give me an ethos to live by and our traditions in spirituality give me a tool of support when my anxiety spirals. We strive and hold pride in passing these values to our students. And we adapt certain practices to find ways that we can all be part of this shared legacy. For example, we teach our non-speaking students to gently tap elders’ heads instead of verbally greeting them. ## Toss of a coin Our strong sense of community means that there is an inbuilt support system for our students. Most of our students do not have support workers. They have close family members to help them when the need arises: grandmothers, neighbours, and _mama mdogos_ (Aunties). Many of our students are looked after by a single mother, but even then, many of the mothers take full-time employment. They have elders or other family members to support their children after school. We also see instances where _mama mdogos_ become second mothers, when our students have lost a parent. But these support systems are a toss of a coin. Sometimes they come as acts of love, and sometimes they are reluctantly fulfilled in the name of obligation. Traditions might force a _mama mdogo_ into supporting their nephew or niece. And people meant to be caring for the children can harm the child, verbally or physically. ## _Mchizi_ M. is an alumni and now an intern at the school. She has lost a parent and is being well supported by her _mama mdogo_. Her school mornings almost always start with _piga-ing story_ (chit-chatting). She drops off at my office, and we share how our days went at home. While I share the mundane of how my day was, she never shies away from sharing her pain. Her house has many visitors, and daily she is addressed not by her name but by being called “ _mchizi_ ”. _Mchizi_ holds a lot of negative connotations. It is a word used to negatively talk/mock persons with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities. Equally, it has been normalized in our culture with a lighter sense of implying someone who doesn’t understand. Its English equivalents range from the r-word to “crazy” or “mad”. To the person who is labelled “mchizi”, it holds a lot of pain. M describes being called _mchizi_ like a knife going through her stomach. ## Am I _mchizi_ , really? One day M. asked me if “ _kweli mimi ni mchizi_ ”, am I _mchizi,_ really? I sat in the room with her, the table keeping our distance at bay. I moved from silence to trying to regulate my beating heart, to trying to breathe again. There was a strange drop in my chest and my stomach felt it just couldn’t function the same. I had flashbacks of being called the same word. But I tried to hide the fact that I also knew the pain of being stabbed with the same knife. In the blur of the moment, I couldn’t express outrage or pure sadness. I had already learnt to express the admin’s nod of sympathy. I presented solutions that I knew would never work, such as sharing this with her _mama mdogo,_ talking to her guests to stop it, ignoring it, and coming back for a heart-to-heart whenever she needed to. M’s direct stare at my empty solutions will never leave my heart. ## Distancing ourselves As admins or educators we almost always distance ourselves from the action. We let the students deal with these sensitive topics by themselves. We present the same solutions, and watch our students drown in the heaviness of it all. I have often faced different versions of this moment with M. Our students and our parents ask, demand, and beg for solutions from us ‘experts’. Yet, all we can offer is empty advice and sympathy. I learnt to create a safe place for M. to share her pain. But I carry the weight of not knowing how to stop the pain. ## Am _I_ mchizi, really? The strangeness is that I have lived through the same pain M is going through. Being called ‘ _mchizi’_ was once synonymous with my identity. At school I was teased by peers who whispered it out of curiosity. I overheard it on phone calls to my parents from a community who could not witness a “good” girl choosing seclusion, and withdrawing from school. Each instance dug deeper into my soul. _Mchizi_ became a dirty word that M did not want to associate with. But unlike M, I never questioned myself, _kweli mimi ni mchizi_. Instead, I believed it and it shapes how I talk and hurt myself on my worst days. And I absorbed all that my community thought of _Mchizi_ people. Simple-minded, dumb, never understanding, not deserving, a burden, the list went on. ## Eliminating differences When parents or guardians notice their child is not developing like others, they don’t first go to doctors or specialists. The first line of support are _mchungajis,_ faith-based “healers”. _Mchungajis_ are expected to solve the mystery of why children are lost in their own worlds, not looking at their parents, or not moving “correctly”. They are expected to alleviate or heal the “pain” these differences bring about. But _mchungajis_ work to eliminate differences rather than understand them. Diversity in thought and behaviour are seen as wrong. And such differences can be attributed to external forces such as _kurogwa_ , black magic or voodoo. The means they use to eliminate differences in our students can be violent. Our culture supports traditional forms of healing and physical abuse as behaviour management. The parents may support this out of love, care, and desperation. ## Dark images Our students repeatedly draw dark images of their _mchungajis’_ spaces with large crosses over it. When someone moves too close, some students’ reflex is to flinch or stiffen their bodies ready for pain. And some have burn marks from the “healing” droplets of sacred candle wax used to remove evil spirits. We sit with their parents, some hiding these stories, others revealing it all. And that’s all we’ve done. We sit there listening, hurting on our students' behalf. We sit there for hours talking about how we can change this. But I sit there feeling we are silently becoming accomplices in this crime. After witnessing some marks on our students our parent-school meetings usually end with how we need to respect all cultures, even when we do not agree with them. We maintain a record of it in a file, and let it go. ## Anger and pain We are meant to be satisfied by completing our duties of talking to parents. But I sit in these meetings with so much anger. So much pain. I have been to these healers. I have been pulled by the hair to remove spirits from me. I have sat in rooms with healers with steel chains on their hands. When they were inflicted on me, I could be detached from such pains. But I sit with pure outrage when my students face the same. I continue to be a part of this cultural system. At a personal level, I abide by my parents, who still give me protective healing beads to stop the evil spirits from making me ‘insane’ again. At an advocacy level, I want to fight each of the cultural practices that want to rid my students of their differences. ## “Only God will protect” As a school, we distance ourselves from the harm we are complicit in, by doing our bare minimum in calling meetings with parents. The parents distance themselves from the harm they inflict by telling themselves it comes from a place of love. As a community, we distance ourselves from this abuse in the name of abiding to our cultural roots. _Mungu tu, atamlinda_ , Only God will protect. The pain and abuse still continue. My students and I are lost in these cultural practices. We live in systems that believe there is something inherently not OK with us. Speaking against these practices is seen like going against the Priest. How are we meant to break these cycles of violence if the practices are too sacred to even question? ## Breaking our chains I often read about fearless advocates, breaking their chains. I document these realities under a disguise. I am fighting this cultural war with a pen, while my students and I continue to bleed. But there is a hope also, in sharing stories like ours. An unbreakable hope that each time we share our realities we will move towards more humane cultural practices. _Asanteni_ , thank you my fellow Debriefers for creating a space where all voices are equally valued. One day we will create a reality that is more accepting and loving. Nyuki ## Outro **See Nyuki's previous writing on the Debrief:** the One-sided deal of “inclusive” education and how it can mean getting rid of difference. **Let your friends know**. Sharing the newsletter is how people find it! **For more from Sonaksha,** see their website. **Help us do more**. The Debrief is free thanks to reader support. ## Acknowledgements Thank you to Sonaksha for the beautiful illustration, you captured lived realities so well! Thank you Peter for your patience in giving space to such emotionally heavy pieces. From pitching various ideas, narrowing down my thoughts, to final edits, your process has a special way to bring out nuances. Thank you to the Disability Debrief, its readers and its sponsors for creating this magical shared space for sharing knowledge, stories, and realities. Lastly, thank you to my students whose courage has always taught me to be kinder to myself!

Lost in a culture that believes something is wrong with us

25.02.2026 09:41 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Reimagining and Rebuilding ****A man visits his damaged home****. In Saraqib, Syria's Idlib countryside, July 5, 2025. Photo by Hibatullah Barakat / Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images. Dear Debriefers, I'm pressing send on this one from Vienna, where I'm attending the Zero Project Conference. Do say hello if you're here in person! And plenty of sessions are live-streamed if you'd like to follow proceedings from afar. This edition is a tour of world news and how disability fits into it. We see how disabled people are playing a role in Syria's reconstruction, and how disabled people are caught in the chaos in the US. There are some policy and legislation updates, reflections on disability journalism, a Barbie doll and a trip into space. But we start with some thanks to new supporters and a question coming out of the Debrief reader survey. **Browse highlights below, or explore the full guide of 116 hand-picked links:** curated across 40 countries or 36 subjects. This edition picks up from the update in January. ## With thanks to new supporters **Disability Debrief is published through a****pay-what-you-can model****.** Thanks to Robert Bosch Stiftung who have given a three-year grant to help us in connecting the disability community. Thanks also to ADD International who renewed their previous support for causing good trouble for a good cause. And to Anna for a new contribution. **Peter Torres Fremlin** is editor of Disability Debrief and is from the UK. Sign-up for a disability lens on world news Subscribe Email sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup. Weekly in your inbox ## Does the Debrief leave you hopeful or discouraged? Thanks to those who have been filling out the Debrief survey. I'm closing it next week, and more respondents before then will help shape how we go forward. Here's one example of the kind of question I need your guidance on. One the one hand, Brittney appreciates the coverage for being uplifting: > “I am thrilled to get disability-related news in my inbox. It helps me find the glimmers of hope in the world and it shines a light on the people who light them.” But on the other hand, another reader finds the Debrief too negative: > “Overly heavy on current events news in a way that seems very negative. I get everything is on fire, not saying we pretend it isn't, but it's discouraging.” Last year global politics changed quite substantially, and in ways that profoundly affected the community the Debrief writes for. As the world changes, how I write about it needs to evolve: I appreciate your feedback on what is and isn't working for you. **Let me know! Fill out the****reader survey****.** ## Reimagining and rebuilding **In Syria,** the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024 opened many questions about the country's future. One of those is the place of disabled people, including the 1.5 million who acquired war-related disabilities. Salma Daoudi reflects on disability and the political afterlife of violence, and how it leads to reimagining justice and what the country will become. Daoudi writes about the need to embrace “embodied histories of loss and resistance”. This means that addressing disability: > “Is therefore to confront the political economy of harm that outlives the regime change, including the institutions that decide who is rendered legible as a victim, which injuries count as public wrongs, and how rights are made operable, or withheld.” This recognition isn't a “peripheral humanitarian issue, but a core political question for a just transition”. And disabled people themselves are among the political actors shaping where the country goes: > “Through grassroots organizing, mutual aid networks, and advocacy campaigns, [war-disabled Syrians] are insisting on accessibility, inclusion, and accountability as foundational principles for Syria’s future. In doing so, they challenge binary narratives that cast them only as heroes or victims, asserting instead their right to shape the society they helped bring into being.” (2025, POMEPS) ## Falling between the cracks The question of which disabled people are understood as unjustly treated is on stark display in the Israeli genocide in Gaza. **In Israel** , Sharon Althul writes on the country emerging from war and its disability system facing a “defining test”: > “The events of the past year have made clear that accessibility is not a niche issue but a national resilience measure. Emergencies expose weak points quickly: unreadable signage at clinics, inaccessible updates for people with sensory disabilities, insufficient transport options for those with mobility challenges and overstretched mental-health services.” **Meanwhile, in Palestine,** Humanity and Inclusion update on the situation of persons with disabilities in the occupied Palestinian territory: Falling within the Cracks. ## Paramilitary force terrorizing US cities **In the United States,** the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency now has a budget larger than most countries' militaries. The havoc that ICE is causing poses a danger to the disabled community. Aliya Rahman, disabled and autistic, was dragged out of her car. That assault on her was “nothing compared to what I experienced inside [the] detention center, both what happened to me and what I saw happening to others”. The American Association of People with Disabilities offers resources and news relating to ICE violence, including mutual support. In other news from the US, see some rays of hope: Marianne Dhenin spoke to disability justice organizers about where they find their motivation going forward. ## “An institutional shift in how disability is perceived” **A global directory of disability legislation:** Valuable 500 and Baker McKenzie have made a guide to disability laws and policy, with a focus on employment, across 100 countries. **In Armenia** , it's great to see reform of the system for classifying disability, described by the Center for Inclusive Policy. Armenia was one of many countries using the Soviet system of classifying disability into three groups. This causes many issues today, including that of corruption (see previously in Ukraine). As such, reform of this system is an important example for post-Soviet countries, as well as what it did for the country itself: > “What Armenia has accomplished is not just a technical upgrade, but an institutional shift in how disability is perceived and addressed.” **In Norway,** the Parliament incorporated the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities into its Human Rights Act. **However, in Indonesia,** a newly ratified Criminal Procedure Code creates concerns about due process for people with disabilities, explored on Disability Justice Project. ## Shaping the future of journalism Reframing Disability asked disabled journalists how they saw the future of journalism. Cara Reedy, who founded the Disabled Journalists Association, shared where she sees innovation happening, and the Debrief's place in that. As well as media outlets that include disability in their coverage: > “There is also a growing ecosystem of Disabled-led newsrooms, Disability Debrief, New Mobility, The Sick Times and our newsroom at the Disabled Journalists Association to name a few. These small newsrooms are covering disabled people in the most organic, rigorous and thorough way. They are experimenting with accommodations and work flows to create spaces that work for everyone while operating on small budgets. Disabled people are the ultimate system hackers. Imagine what they could do with full investment.” ## “Don't mourn, organize” **Bob Kafka** , US disability organizer, passed away in December. He ended his emails with the call: “Don’t mourn, organize.” **Graham Findlay,** a UK disability rights activist, passed away this month. Graham was a Debriefer, and I will miss his insightful and encouraging comments. ## Parking, playtime and lift-off **In the United Kingdom** , Vera Kubenz's research on the politics of disabled parking shows the toll of daily encounters and needing to prove one's disability to strangers: > “Two thirds (67%) of disabled people taking part in the survey had experienced hate and harassment in accessible parking spaces. People with chronic illness were particularly likely to report this type of encounter.” **In the United States,** Mattel launched an autistic Barbie complete with ear defenders and fidget spinner. Sarah Kurchak writes that the Barbie doesn't represent her and “she shouldn't have to”. Kurchak also does an intriguing run-down of criticisms of the Barbie from other autistic people. Meanwhile, the D*List shares the other Barbies they'd love to see. **And in space news,** Michaela Benthaus became the first wheelchair user to go into space in a trip with Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin. ## Closing out... **More from me:** I really enjoyed speaking to Zubee and Raya on the My Voice Podcast about my own disability journey (no transcript, sorry). **And in case you missed them, see recent Debriefs:** * Searching for silence, Tharā Gabriel's evocative personal essay on hearing loss and tinnitus in Trinidad and Tobago. * You can’t pick palm nuts without your hands getting oily, Alexander Ogheneruemu coming to terms with the liberation and flaws of the Deaf community in Nigeria. That's all from me for today. Do enjoy your own adventures in disability news, and if you haven't already, fill out the Debrief survey, Peter ## Outro **Further reading**. All the links from these curated editions go into the Debrief library, which now has over 7,100 links from over 170 countries. See below for contents from this month's update. **Let your friends know**. Sharing the newsletter is how people find it! **Connect**. Get in touch. You can find me on Linkedin and Bluesky. **Help us do more**. The Debrief is free thanks to reader support. ## Recent News This update has 116 curated links from 40 countries and regions, organized across 36 subjects. You can explore it organized by subject or by country. ### Subjects * Accessibility and Design * Assistive Technology * Civil Society and Community * Climate Crisis and Environment * Communication and Language * Conflict and Peace * Culture, Entertainment and Media * Data and Research * Digital Accessibility and Technology * Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response * Economics and Social Protection * Education and Childhood * Employment, Business and Work * Gender Equality and Women with Disabilities * History and Memorial * Humanitarian, Migrants and Refugees * Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization * International Cooperation * Justice Systems and Legal Capacity * Lived Experience and Opinion * Mobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism * Policy and Rights * Politics and Elections * Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights * Space Exploration * Sport and Paralympics ### Countries * Global * International News * Africa * Egypt * Ghana * Kenya * Mozambique * Nigeria * Sierra Leone * South Sudan * Uganda * Asia * Armenia * Bangladesh * India * Indonesia * Israel * Kazakhstan * Myanmar * Palestine * Syria * Thailand * Uzbekistan * Europe * Europe * Croatia * France * Germany * Malta * Norway * Serbia * United Kingdom * North America * Canada * Cuba * Honduras * Mexico * Trinidad and Tobago * United States * Oceania * Australia * New Zealand * South America * Argentina * Guyana * Paraguay * Venezuela ## Acknowledgements Photo by Hibatullah Barakat / Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images. Thanks to Celestine Fraser for selecting it. And as always many thanks to everyone who shares links, news and reports, and the readers and organisations whose support makes this work possible.

Reconstruction in Syria, and curated news from 40 countries

18.02.2026 09:45 👍 0 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Disability news, February 2026, by country **Library > February 2026** _This page is organized by country, you can also see links organized bysubject._ This update has 116 curated links from 40 countries and regions, organized across 36 subjects. ## Contents * Global * International News * Africa * Egypt * Ghana * Kenya * Mozambique * Nigeria * Sierra Leone * South Sudan * Uganda * Asia * Armenia * Bangladesh * India * Indonesia * Israel * Kazakhstan * Myanmar * Palestine * Syria * Thailand * Uzbekistan * Europe * Europe * Croatia * France * Germany * Malta * Norway * Serbia * United Kingdom * North America * Canada * Cuba * Honduras * Mexico * Trinidad and Tobago * United States * Oceania * Australia * New Zealand * South America * Argentina * Guyana * Paraguay * Venezuela ## Resources ### Global #### International News **InCivil Society and Community**: 2025 Was a Year of Collective Mourning for Disabled Communities. “If we can create and build on communal structures of care, we can hold that grief together more easily.” (Jan, Truthout) **InClimate Crisis and Environment**: Disability & Climate Change @COP30. “A public resource that aims to capture some of the deep and rich effort, research, advocacy, policy discussions, negotiations and progress made during COP30.” (2025, Sarah Boyd) **InCommunication and Language**: How Louis Braille’s musical notation system remains relevant 200 years after its invention. (Jan, ABC News) **InConflict and Peace**: ‘The system has failed’: Giles Duley’s mission to reframe disability in war. (2025, UN) **InCulture, Entertainment and Media**: Disabled-led media will shape the future of journalism. Cara Reedy says: > “There is also a growing ecosystem of Disabled-led newsrooms, Disability Debrief, New Mobility, The Sick Times and our newsroom at the Disabled Journalists Association to name a few. These small newsrooms are covering disabled people in the most organic, rigorous and thorough way. They are experimenting with accommodations and work flows to create spaces that work for everyone while operating on small budgets. Disabled people are the ultimate system hackers. Imagine what they could do with full investment.” (Dec, Reframing Disability) **InDigital Accessibility and Technology**: Designing accessibility for real use, not dashboards: > “Treating accessibility as design work, grounded in real use and real contexts, allows teams to define success first and use metrics as supporting signals, not proxies.” (Jan) Eric Bailey's predictions for the future of accessibility: > ‘There will be concerted efforts to “solve” accessibility on the performative, contractual layer. This is in opposition to doing the in-the-trenches work to actually remove barriers.’ (Jan, Mantis & Co) Digital Accessibility Ethics: Disability Inclusion in All Things Tech, an edited collection. (Jan, Law Office of Lainey Feingold) Android accessibility updates include dark theme’s expanded option, Gemini in TalkBack and more. (2025, Google) Digital Inclusion of Persons with Disabilities: Practical Framework and Toolbox. (2025, Inklusion Leben) Public Statement Condemning Derogatory and Dehumanising Content Created at Targeting Persons with Albinism. (Jan, Africa Albinism Network) TikTok Adds More Accessibility Features. (2025, SocialMedia Today) **InEducation and Childhood**: This is our rhythm: academic becoming and realignment in deaf space. (2025, Deaf Studies and Deaf Education) **InEmployment, Business and Work**: Global Disability Legislation Index: a “comprehensive guide to disability legislation across 100 countries, providing employers and employees with critical legal knowledge on disability inclusion.” (Jan, Valuable 500) **InInternational Cooperation**: Digital Inclusion of Persons with Disabilities: Practical Framework and Toolbox. (2025, Inklusion Leben) **InPolicy and Rights**: Global Disability Legislation Index: a “comprehensive guide to disability legislation across 100 countries, providing employers and employees with critical legal knowledge on disability inclusion.” (Jan, Valuable 500) **InSpace Exploration**: Engineer becomes first wheelchair user to go to space. (2025, BBC) **InSport and Paralympics**: Unequal access to nature: Few outdoor spaces in Europe and the U.S. accommodate sensory, mental disabilities. (2025, Mongabay) FIFA’s ticketing policy is excluding fans with disabilities from the 2026 World Cup. (2025, Football Supporters Europe) _Back tocontents._ ### Africa #### Egypt **InCommunication and Language**: New Braille-Accessible Public Library Opens in Maadi. (Jan, Cairo Scene) _Back tocontents._ #### Ghana **InEconomics and Social Protection**: Inclusive Finance in Action. “How Ghana’s Financial Sector is Learning to Serve Everyone” (2025, Inklusion leben) _Back tocontents._ #### Kenya **InEconomics and Social Protection**: High Court’s affirmation of persons with disabilities’ legal capacity a welcome step forward: > “the High Court affirmed that persons with disabilities have the right to obtain the services of private banks on an equal basis with all others, without being subjected to any additional restrictions and while being provided with relevant reasonable accommodations.” (2025, ICJ) **InJustice Systems and Legal Capacity**: High Court’s affirmation of persons with disabilities’ legal capacity a welcome step forward: > “the High Court affirmed that persons with disabilities have the right to obtain the services of private banks on an equal basis with all others, without being subjected to any additional restrictions and while being provided with relevant reasonable accommodations.” (2025, ICJ) _Back tocontents._ #### Mozambique **InDisaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response**: People with disabilities need urgent protection amid deadly Mozambique floods. (Jan, Relief Web) **InInternational Cooperation**: Mozambique, China maintain close cooperation in supporting persons with disabilities: > “At the event, the Chinese Embassy in Mozambique donated wheelchairs, assistive devices, daily necessities, and food supplies valued at approximately 28,000 U.S. dollars to local persons with disabilities.” (2025, Xinhua) _Back tocontents._ #### Nigeria **InCivil Society and Community**: You can’t pick palm nuts without your hands getting oily: Coming to terms with the liberation and flaws of Deaf community in Nigeria. (Feb, Disability Debrief) **InGender Equality and Women with Disabilities**: ‘Every step a struggle:’ Nigerian woman with disabilities leads push for dignity and inclusion. (2025, UN) **InHumanitarian, Migrants and Refugees**: ‘Every step a struggle:’ Nigerian woman with disabilities leads push for dignity and inclusion. (2025, UN) _Back tocontents._ #### Sierra Leone **InEducation and Childhood**: “I always climb the bench like a mountain”: The design failures shutting children with dwarfism out of Sierra Leone’s schools. (2025, Minority Africa) _Back tocontents._ #### South Sudan **InPolitics and Elections**: Disability groups call for inclusion in constitution-making process. (2025, Radio Tamazuj) _Back tocontents._ #### Uganda **InHumanitarian, Migrants and Refugees**: Disabled Sudanese refugees in Uganda camps face aid vacuum, advocates say. (2025, Sudan Tribune) _Back tocontents._ ### Asia #### Armenia **InEconomics and Social Protection**: Armenia's Disability Assessment Reform. “What Armenia has accomplished is not just a technical upgrade, but an institutional shift in how disability is perceived and addressed.” In particular: > “One of the most frequently cited improvements with the new system was the reduced risk of corruption. Multiple respondents, including OPDs, multilateral actors, and assessment professionals, stated that the digitalization and anonymity of the process have limited the scope for human manipulation and improved accountability. The implementation of a functionality score based on standardized criteria, rather than broad disability categories, was also seen as a major step toward objectivity and fairness”. (2025, Center for Inclusive Policy) **InIndependent Living and Deinstitutionalization**: Creating caring homes for children with disabilities: “While society focuses on accessibility of public spaces, very little attention is paid to the most important space – the child’s own home”. (2025, EU Neighbours East) _Back tocontents._ #### Bangladesh **InHumanitarian, Migrants and Refugees**: Frailty and disability among older adults residing in Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh (Jan, Aging and Health) _Back tocontents._ #### India **InAccessibility and Design**: A Swiss photographer’s journey to document accessibility in India. (2025, Telegraph India) **InLived Experience and Opinion**: In the quiet world of words: “Through creativity, resilience and determination, Aditi Sowmyanarayan is reshaping perceptions of autism and neurodiversity, proving that expression comes in many forms”. (2025, Deccan Herald) **InPolicy and Rights**: Indian Constitution is ableist. We need to confront its foundational gaps: > ‘Disability remains a ground for “valid” discrimination within the Constitution, in which a person with disability can be removed from her office “for the reason of infirmity of mind and body”.’ (2025, The Indian Express) _Back tocontents._ #### Indonesia **InEmployment, Business and Work**: Celebrating inclusivity and creativity through Indonesia's batik traditions: “offers a pathway to independence and entrepreneurship for individuals with learning disabilities.” (2025, ILO) **InJustice Systems and Legal Capacity**: Disability and Due Process. Indonesia’s Updated Criminal Procedure Code Raises Questions about Access to Justice. (2025, Disability Justice Project) _Back tocontents._ #### Israel **InConflict and Peace**: Two brothers, one mission: Living with muscular dystrophy, they refuse to give up on the IDF: > “After his older brother proved it was possible, 18-year-old Aviel Yosef David followed his path to volunteer in uniform, showing that disability does not define contribution”. (2025, Ynet News) Emerging from war, Israel’s disability system faces a defining test: > “The events of the past year have made clear that accessibility is not a niche issue but a national resilience measure. Emergencies expose weak points quickly: unreadable signage at clinics, inaccessible updates for people with sensory disabilities, insufficient transport options for those with mobility challenges and overstretched mental-health services.” (2025, JNS) **InData and Research**: Life Expectancy Falls, Disabilities Surge: > “As a result of the war, a significant increase was recorded in the number of people with disabilities in Israel. In 2024, approximately 1.32 million people with various disabilities were included in the registry, representing 13.1% of the total population, compared to approximately 1.163 million in 2023, who represented 11.7% of the population. Simultaneously, a sharp increase occurred in the number of disability benefit recipients from the National Insurance Institute, including those receiving benefits due to hostile actions, which rose from 4,200 in 2023 to 29,900 in 2024.” (Jan, Israel Hayom) _Back tocontents._ #### Kazakhstan **InAssistive Technology**: Assistive Technologies Child’s Needs Assessment and Ecosystem in Kazakhstan. (2025, UNICEF) _Back tocontents._ #### Myanmar **InConflict and Peace**: Inclusion amid crisis: Ensuring the rights of persons with disabilities in post-coup Myanmar. (2025, International IDEA) **InPolicy and Rights**: Myanmar’s disabled population faces diminishing rights, severe neglect under junta rule. (2025, Mizzima) _Back tocontents._ #### Palestine **InConflict and Peace**: The hidden struggles of people with disabilities in Gaza. “Israel’s genocide in Gaza has been cruel to disabled people, whose disabilities have been exacerbated by inadequate access to food, medicine, and support” (2025, Prism) Falling within the Cracks: Situation of Persons with Disabilities in the occupied Palestinian territory: > “Throughout the protracted, decades-long cycle of violence and man-made humanitarian crises, people with disabilities have been at the highest risk of marginalization and exclusion” (2025, Relief Web) _Back tocontents._ #### Syria **InConflict and Peace**: Disability and the Political Afterlife of Violence: Reimagining Justice and Statehood in Post-Assad Syria: > “war-disabled Syrians are not merely passive victims; they are emerging as political actors. Through grassroots organizing, mutual aid networks, and advocacy campaigns, they are insisting on accessibility, inclusion, and accountability as foundational principles for Syria’s future. In doing so, they challenge binary narratives that cast them only as heroes or victims, asserting instead their right to shape the society they helped bring into being.” (2025, POMEPS) _Back tocontents._ #### Thailand **InPolitics and Elections**: Concerns raised over election accessibility for disabled voters in Thailand: > “They cite issues such as inadequate access to policy information, insufficient voting aids, and potential confusion over the proposed use of colour-coded ballot papers.” (Jan, Thaiger) _Back tocontents._ #### Uzbekistan **InData and Research**: The absence of questions on disability in the census. (In Uzbek, Jan, Gazeta) _Back tocontents._ ### Europe #### Europe **InCulture, Entertainment and Media**: Guidelines on Media Representation of Persons with Disabilities. (2025, ENIL) **InPolicy and Rights**: Interview with MEP Ciaran Mullooly: “We need binding accessibility standards for all new public and private housing”. (2025, EDF) _Back tocontents._ #### Croatia **InCulture, Entertainment and Media**: People With Disabilities Star at Inclusive Fashion Show in Croatia. (2025, BalkanInsight) _Back tocontents._ #### France **InEmployment, Business and Work**: In France, Rehabilitation Produces a Watchmaker. “Cormac Hanley, a stroke survivor, created his 47Zero watch brand after training at the Òfil Osons l’Emploi horology program.” (2025, New York Times) _Back tocontents._ #### Germany **InCivil Society and Community**: “Accessibility is the key to an inclusive society”. Interview with Verena Bentele, president of the welfare association VdK. (2025) _Back tocontents._ #### Malta **InPolicy and Rights**: Thirty years on Malta’s disabled community faces the same obstacles. (2025, Newsbook) _Back tocontents._ #### Norway **InPolicy and Rights**: Norway Makes History. “With a clear majority, the Norwegian Parliament voted to incorporate the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) into the Human Rights Act.” (2025, ENIL) _Back tocontents._ #### Serbia **InEmployment, Business and Work**: Why Serbia is experiencing a decline in job opportunities for persons with disabilities. (2025, NIN) _Back tocontents._ #### United Kingdom **InAccessibility and Design**: Disabled people in England ‘betrayed’ by cuts to new-build accessibility targets. (2025, the Guardian) **InCivil Society and Community**: Disability charity chief condemns UK government as she rejects MBE. Tressa Burke, chief executive of the Glasgow Disability Alliance: > ‘turned down an MBE in the New Year Honours over what she described as the "simply intolerable" situation facing disabled people in the UK.’ (2025, BBC) **InCommunication and Language**: Sign language interpreters say job can be 'emotional whiplash'. (2025, BBC) **InConflict and Peace**: Disability Charity Sacks Employee for Palestine Protest, Citing ‘Brand Reputation’. (2025, Novara Media) **InCulture, Entertainment and Media**: Nnena Kalu becomes first artist with a learning disability to win Turner prize. “[Her win] begins to erase that border between the neurotypical and neurodiverse artist.” (2025, the Guardian) Leatherhead disability group recreates Victorian hospital images. (2025, BBC) **InDigital Accessibility and Technology**: Scottish judge becomes first to use computer led voice tech in court after MND diagnosis. (2025, ITVx) **InEducation and Childhood**: Whether the government likes it or not, the Special Needs debate is full of a familiar nastiness. (Jan, Maybe I'm Amazed) **InEmployment, Business and Work**: A better understanding of disability is key factor in improving inclusion, new BDF findings. (2025, Business Disability Forum) **InHistory and Memorial**: In memory of Graham Findlay. (Feb, Disability Wales) Stigma, trust and the history of UK disability policy: > “The UK state has a history of creating and amplifying disability stigma. Politicians have regularly stoked public fears of disabled people, through talk of shirkers and scroungers. Lower-level officials have casually and harmfully judged, ignored and discriminated against disabled people.” (2025, History & Policy) **InJustice Systems and Legal Capacity**: Scottish judge becomes first to use computer led voice tech in court after MND diagnosis. (2025, ITVx) **InLived Experience and Opinion**: ‘You just feel so light!’: two wheelchair users – one 81, one 25 – on welfare cuts, housing and the joy of swimming. (2025, the Guardian) **InMobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism**: What happened to the invalid carriage? Before the Motability scheme, disabled people were leased a tiny blue car. (2025, Body Babble) The Politics of Parking “a 4-year research project which seeks to explore how disabled people's everyday ‘encounters’ with others contribute to experiences of oppression, particularly in the context of Blue Badge parking spaces.” For example: > “Two thirds (67%) of disabled people taking part in the survey had experienced hate and harassment in accessible parking spaces. People with chronic illness were particularly likely to report this type of encounter.” (2025, Vera Kubenz) _Back tocontents._ ### North America #### Canada **InAccessibility and Design**: Disability advocates urge Toronto, province to plan ahead for winter accessibility challenges. (Jan, CBC) **InEducation and Childhood**: How Universities Are Shutting Out Disabled Students and Staff: “Some administrators treat accommodations as a favour—and those requesting them as problems”. (Jan, The Walrus) **InIndependent Living and Deinstitutionalization**: Extraordinary measures of sibling worldmaking. Ethnographic research involving disabled and non/disabled siblings: > “Sibling disability worldmaking is a co-creative process in which the siblings collaborate and work together to produce livable lives and habitable worlds for them both. Once parents are no longer primary supports, siblings rely on one another, navigating their roles and relationships in a shared effort to create a new sense of stability. This can happen gradually in fluid ways over time as roles shift, or it can happen in traumatic and jolting ways during times of crisis.” (2025, Medical Anthropology Quarterly) _Back tocontents._ #### Cuba **InRelationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights**: A full life for people with disabilities. Reflection on education and, _El derecho de soñar_ , a soap-opera featuring two people with intellectual disabilities in a relationship. (In Spanish, 2025, CubaHora) _Back tocontents._ #### Honduras **InPolitics and Elections**: People with disabilities voting in elections. (In Spanish, 2025, Tiempo) _Back tocontents._ #### Mexico **InJustice Systems and Legal Capacity**: New Guide Aims to Help Realize Potential of Key Legal Capacity Reform. (2025, Human Rights Watch) _Back tocontents._ #### Trinidad and Tobago **InLived Experience and Opinion**: Searching for silence: Tinnitus 1 - 0 Trinidad and Tobago. (Feb, Disability Debrief) _Back tocontents._ #### United States **InAccessibility and Design**: Snowstorms Are Hell for Wheelchair Users —But They Don’t Have to Be. (Feb, Mother Jones) **InCivil Society and Community**: Disability Justice Organizers share where they find hope in the struggle for disability justice as we go into the second year of Trump 2.0. (Jan, Truthout) The ‘R-Word’ Returns, Dismaying Those Who Fought to Oust It. (Jan, New York Times) **InCommunication and Language**: Bad Bunny’s Sign Language Interpreter Will Make Super Bowl History, Too: by interpreting in Puerto Rican Sign Language. (Feb, New York Times) See also an interview with the interpreter. Trump administration says sign language services ‘intrude’ on Trump’s ability to control his image. (2025, AP News) **InCulture, Entertainment and Media**: Mattel launches its first autistic Barbie. (Jan, the Guardian) **InData and Research**: A Call Out to Disability Studies and Mad Studies Scholars: > “We become curriculum. We become words on the powerpoints, the lectures, the textbooks, but never fully acknowledged as whole human beings with fundamental needs. We’re studied, cited, discussed, and still unsupported.” (Jan, The Numbing Agenda) **InEconomics and Social Protection**: Low-Income Disabled Youth Face Significant Challenges Upon Coming of Age. Many Lose Critical Income Support From Supplemental Security Income: > “More than 4 in 10 SSI youth lose their benefits when they turn 18 because they have not demonstrated that they meet SSI’s stringent adult definition of disability, even if they continue to have health conditions that limit their daily activities.” (2025, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities) **InEducation and Childhood**: Born Deaf and Blind, She’s Caught in Trump’s Anti-Diversity Crusade: “A program for deafblind children helped 3-year-old Annie Garner, born with poor vision and no ears, learn to communicate.” (2025, New York Times) The Atlantic’s ‘Accommodation Nation’ is an Ableist Abomination. (2025, Disabled Journalists Association) More Harvard Undergrads Are Reporting Disabilities, Bringing Rate in Line With National Average: > “The rise — from roughly three percent in 2014 to 21 percent in 2024 — brings the share of undergraduate students receiving accommodations at Harvard in line with the national average, which has consistently hovered around 20 percent.” (2025, Harvard Crimson) No, Colleges Do Not “Over-Accommodate”. A certain genre of articles sceptical of higher ed’s disability accommodation process fuels attacks on civil rights. (2025, IHE) **InEmployment, Business and Work**: The Problem With Palantir’s New Neurodivergent Fellowship: > “A ‘neurodivergent fellowship’ at a corporation like Palantir isn’t meaningful inclusion or representation so much as it’s an exercise in having an often punitively surveilled population be complicit in making platforms of weaponized surveillance, to build and be the systems and tools of their own and others’ oppression”. (2025, Mother Jones) Mamdani Pledges More Inclusive Hiring for Disabled New Yorkers. (2025, AbleNews) **InHistory and Memorial**: Leslie Lee III, culture critic and Long COVID advocate, dies at 43. (2025, The Sick Times) Major Victories in Advancing Disability Justice in Massachusetts. “Disabled leaders and our allies force passage of sweeping government transparency bill to confront the tragic untold history of state violence against disabled children and adults.” (2025, (Un)Hidden) 'Don't mourn, organize.' How disability rights advocate Bob Kafka helped shape Austin and the nation. (2025, KUT News) Crip Screens: Countering Psychiatric Media Technologies: > ‘Banner shows how institutions use documentary films, data visualization, network graphs, therapy chatbots, virtual patient training programs, and pharmaceutical advertising to pathologize certain people as “deviant” and “mentally ill.” Those people so categorized have used media technologies toward alternative visions of care. Examining insurgent media and technology efforts in the 1960s and 1970s, Banner shows how women and communities of color worked to wrest away from psychiatry its hold over representing mental distress and pathological categorization.’ (2025, MNG Bookshop) **InIndependent Living and Deinstitutionalization**: Recent Changes to Immigration Policies Have Disastrous Impacts on Disabled People and Long-Term Care. (Jan, AAPD) Broken Care, Broken Lives: > “State agencies and organizations charged with protecting people with intellectual and developmental disabilities are repeatedly failing residents, putting them at risk of abuse, neglect, and even death.” (2025, Grace Dow Writes) **InJustice Systems and Legal Capacity**: I’m autistic and have a brain injury. ICE dragged me from my car anyway. Then my nightmare really began. (Feb, Independent) The Danger ICE Poses to the Disabled Community. (Jan, Non-Profit Quarterly) Woman dragged from car by ICE identified as U.S. citizen Aliya Rahman: "I'm disabled trying to go to the doctor up there, that's why I didn't move". (Jan, CBC) A Texas man detained by ICE was his disabled son’s sole caregiver. His son will be laid to rest without him: > “At first, they hoped Maher could be released to provide the 24-hour specialized care for Wael that only he was trained to do. But in Wael’s last days, they were holding hope Maher could at least say goodbye to his son in person.” (Jan, CNN) AAPD Resources and News Sources Amidst ICE Violence. (Jan, AAPD) Democracy Denied for Disabled Americans: Guardianship and the Right To Vote: > “In many states, people under guardianship are automatically barred from voting or may lose their rights at the discretion of a judge or guardian.” (2025, CAP) **InLived Experience and Opinion**: Autistic Barbie Doesn’t Represent Me. She Shouldn’t Have to. (Jan, Time) A Take on Disability Pride from LAMN Board Chair, Tye Martin: > “Disability pride is choosing to be present in a body that often demands more than it gives. It is continuing even when nothing about the moment feels empowering. Disability pride looks like waking up and seeing what the next day brings without expectations. The tide will turn and eventually the season will change again.” (2025, LAMN) **InMobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism**: His Job Is to Make the Subway Accessible. “Quemuel Arroyo, the New York transit system’s chief accessibility officer, has used a wheelchair for half his life. He understands how difficult it is to navigate the subway.” (2025, New York Times) **InPolicy and Rights**: Texas and Eight Other States Renew Attack on Section 504 and the Right of Disabled People to Live in their Communities. (Jan, DREDF) **InPolitics and Elections**: Democracy Denied for Disabled Americans: Guardianship and the Right To Vote: > “In many states, people under guardianship are automatically barred from voting or may lose their rights at the discretion of a judge or guardian.” (2025, CAP) **InSport and Paralympics**: Super Bowl has new accessibility measures for blind fans. (Feb, NPR) _Back tocontents._ ### Oceania #### Australia **InPolicy and Rights**: Australian ALS Patient Denied Disability Support, Chooses Euthanasia. (Jan, National Review) _Back tocontents._ #### New Zealand **InCommunication and Language**: Fear of language loss drives push to develop reo Māori signs for tāngata turi. (2025, Te Ao Māori News) Digital NZSL library to boost access for Deaf New Zealanders. (2025, Security Brief) **InEconomics and Social Protection**: Whaikaha, Whaimana: Our Voices Count: “Research by Disability Leadership Canterbury exposes the deep impact of the March 2024 disability system changes on 40,000 people and their whānau.” (Jan, Disability Leadership Canterbury) **InIndependent Living and Deinstitutionalization**: Family carers win landmark Supreme Court case defining them as homeworkers: > “Caring for my daughter is the most important role I will ever have, but it also replaces services the Government would otherwise need to provide. This judgment makes it clear that when the Government relies on family carers to carry out this work it must also respect our rights as workers, with fair pay, proper protections, and dignity.” (2025, NZ Herald) 20-year-old man dies after staff miss major red flag his bowel had ruptured. “Care staff failed to recognise the severity of his condition or seek timely medical assistance”. (Jan, RNZ News) _Back tocontents._ ### South America #### Argentina **InEconomics and Social Protection**: Milei's government announces the closure of the National Disability Agency: “While the Executive assures that benefits will not be cut, uncertainty reigns among the affected families”. (In Spanish, 2025, Últimas Noticias) _Back tocontents._ #### Guyana **InEconomics and Social Protection**: One-off grant for persons with disabilities – Pres. Ali announces. (2025, News Room Guyana) _Back tocontents._ #### Paraguay **InPolicy and Rights**: Paraguay begins a new era in the protection of the rights of people with disabilities, with a new law on rights of persons with disabilities. (In Spanish, 2025, Ultima Hora) _Back tocontents._ #### Venezuela **InInternational Cooperation**: UNDP Venezuela presents its Disability Inclusion Strategy 2026–2029. (2025, UNDP) _Back tocontents._

Latest international disability inclusion news across 40 countries

13.02.2026 19:12 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Disability news, February 2026, by subject **Library > February 2026** _This page is organized by subject, you can also see links organized bycountry._ This update has 116 curated links from 40 countries and regions, organized across 36 subjects. # Contents * Accessibility and Design * Assistive Technology * Civil Society and Community * Climate Crisis and Environment * Communication and Language * Conflict and Peace * Culture, Entertainment and Media * Data and Research * Digital Accessibility and Technology * Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response * Economics and Social Protection * Education and Childhood * Employment, Business and Work * Gender Equality and Women with Disabilities * History and Memorial * Humanitarian, Migrants and Refugees * Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization * International Cooperation * Justice Systems and Legal Capacity * Lived Experience and Opinion * Mobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism * Policy and Rights * Politics and Elections * Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights * Space Exploration * Sport and Paralympics ## Accessibility and Design ### Overview #### Canada Disability advocates urge Toronto, province to plan ahead for winter accessibility challenges. (Jan, CBC) #### India A Swiss photographer’s journey to document accessibility in India. (2025, Telegraph India) #### United States Snowstorms Are Hell for Wheelchair Users —But They Don’t Have to Be. (Feb, Mother Jones) ### Housing #### United Kingdom Disabled people in England ‘betrayed’ by cuts to new-build accessibility targets. (2025, the Guardian) _Back tocontents._ ## Assistive Technology #### Kazakhstan Assistive Technologies Child’s Needs Assessment and Ecosystem in Kazakhstan. (2025, UNICEF) _Back tocontents._ ## Civil Society and Community #### International News 2025 Was a Year of Collective Mourning for Disabled Communities. “If we can create and build on communal structures of care, we can hold that grief together more easily.” (Jan, Truthout) #### Germany “Accessibility is the key to an inclusive society”. Interview with Verena Bentele, president of the welfare association VdK. (2025) #### Nigeria You can’t pick palm nuts without your hands getting oily: Coming to terms with the liberation and flaws of Deaf community in Nigeria. (Feb, Disability Debrief) #### United Kingdom Disability charity chief condemns UK government as she rejects MBE. Tressa Burke, chief executive of the Glasgow Disability Alliance: > ‘turned down an MBE in the New Year Honours over what she described as the "simply intolerable" situation facing disabled people in the UK.’ (2025, BBC) #### United States Disability Justice Organizers share where they find hope in the struggle for disability justice as we go into the second year of Trump 2.0. (Jan, Truthout) The ‘R-Word’ Returns, Dismaying Those Who Fought to Oust It. (Jan, New York Times) _Back tocontents._ ## Climate Crisis and Environment ### Conference of Parties (COP) #### International News Disability & Climate Change @COP30. “A public resource that aims to capture some of the deep and rich effort, research, advocacy, policy discussions, negotiations and progress made during COP30.” (2025, Sarah Boyd) _Back tocontents._ ## Communication and Language ### Sign Languages #### New Zealand Fear of language loss drives push to develop reo Māori signs for tāngata turi. (2025, Te Ao Māori News) Digital NZSL library to boost access for Deaf New Zealanders. (2025, Security Brief) #### United Kingdom Sign language interpreters say job can be 'emotional whiplash'. (2025, BBC) #### United States Bad Bunny’s Sign Language Interpreter Will Make Super Bowl History, Too: by interpreting in Puerto Rican Sign Language. (Feb, New York Times) See also an interview with the interpreter. Trump administration says sign language services ‘intrude’ on Trump’s ability to control his image. (2025, AP News) ### Braille #### International News How Louis Braille’s musical notation system remains relevant 200 years after its invention. (Jan, ABC News) #### Egypt New Braille-Accessible Public Library Opens in Maadi. (Jan, Cairo Scene) _Back tocontents._ ## Conflict and Peace ### Overview #### International News ‘The system has failed’: Giles Duley’s mission to reframe disability in war. (2025, UN) #### Israel Two brothers, one mission: Living with muscular dystrophy, they refuse to give up on the IDF: > “After his older brother proved it was possible, 18-year-old Aviel Yosef David followed his path to volunteer in uniform, showing that disability does not define contribution”. (2025, Ynet News) #### Myanmar Inclusion amid crisis: Ensuring the rights of persons with disabilities in post-coup Myanmar. (2025, International IDEA) #### Syria Disability and the Political Afterlife of Violence: Reimagining Justice and Statehood in Post-Assad Syria: > “war-disabled Syrians are not merely passive victims; they are emerging as political actors. Through grassroots organizing, mutual aid networks, and advocacy campaigns, they are insisting on accessibility, inclusion, and accountability as foundational principles for Syria’s future. In doing so, they challenge binary narratives that cast them only as heroes or victims, asserting instead their right to shape the society they helped bring into being.” (2025, POMEPS) ### Israel-Palestine Conflict #### Israel Emerging from war, Israel’s disability system faces a defining test: > “The events of the past year have made clear that accessibility is not a niche issue but a national resilience measure. Emergencies expose weak points quickly: unreadable signage at clinics, inaccessible updates for people with sensory disabilities, insufficient transport options for those with mobility challenges and overstretched mental-health services.” (2025, JNS) #### Palestine The hidden struggles of people with disabilities in Gaza. “Israel’s genocide in Gaza has been cruel to disabled people, whose disabilities have been exacerbated by inadequate access to food, medicine, and support” (2025, Prism) Falling within the Cracks: Situation of Persons with Disabilities in the occupied Palestinian territory: > “Throughout the protracted, decades-long cycle of violence and man-made humanitarian crises, people with disabilities have been at the highest risk of marginalization and exclusion” (2025, Relief Web) #### United Kingdom Disability Charity Sacks Employee for Palestine Protest, Citing ‘Brand Reputation’. (2025, Novara Media) _Back tocontents._ ## Culture, Entertainment and Media ### Overview #### United Kingdom Nnena Kalu becomes first artist with a learning disability to win Turner prize. “[Her win] begins to erase that border between the neurotypical and neurodiverse artist.” (2025, the Guardian) Leatherhead disability group recreates Victorian hospital images. (2025, BBC) #### United States Mattel launches its first autistic Barbie. (Jan, the Guardian) ### Media #### International News Disabled-led media will shape the future of journalism. Cara Reedy says: > “There is also a growing ecosystem of Disabled-led newsrooms, Disability Debrief, New Mobility, The Sick Times and our newsroom at the Disabled Journalists Association to name a few. These small newsrooms are covering disabled people in the most organic, rigorous and thorough way. They are experimenting with accommodations and work flows to create spaces that work for everyone while operating on small budgets. Disabled people are the ultimate system hackers. Imagine what they could do with full investment.” (Dec, Reframing Disability) #### Europe Guidelines on Media Representation of Persons with Disabilities. (2025, ENIL) ### Clothing and Fashion #### Croatia People With Disabilities Star at Inclusive Fashion Show in Croatia. (2025, BalkanInsight) _Back tocontents._ ## Data and Research ### Overview #### Israel Life Expectancy Falls, Disabilities Surge: > “As a result of the war, a significant increase was recorded in the number of people with disabilities in Israel. In 2024, approximately 1.32 million people with various disabilities were included in the registry, representing 13.1% of the total population, compared to approximately 1.163 million in 2023, who represented 11.7% of the population. Simultaneously, a sharp increase occurred in the number of disability benefit recipients from the National Insurance Institute, including those receiving benefits due to hostile actions, which rose from 4,200 in 2023 to 29,900 in 2024.” (Jan, Israel Hayom) #### Uzbekistan The absence of questions on disability in the census. (In Uzbek, Jan, Gazeta) ### Research #### United States A Call Out to Disability Studies and Mad Studies Scholars: > “We become curriculum. We become words on the powerpoints, the lectures, the textbooks, but never fully acknowledged as whole human beings with fundamental needs. We’re studied, cited, discussed, and still unsupported.” (Jan, The Numbing Agenda) _Back tocontents._ ## Digital Accessibility and Technology ### Overview #### International News Designing accessibility for real use, not dashboards: > “Treating accessibility as design work, grounded in real use and real contexts, allows teams to define success first and use metrics as supporting signals, not proxies.” (Jan) Eric Bailey's predictions for the future of accessibility: > ‘There will be concerted efforts to “solve” accessibility on the performative, contractual layer. This is in opposition to doing the in-the-trenches work to actually remove barriers.’ (Jan, Mantis & Co) Digital Accessibility Ethics: Disability Inclusion in All Things Tech, an edited collection. (Jan, Law Office of Lainey Feingold) Android accessibility updates include dark theme’s expanded option, Gemini in TalkBack and more. (2025, Google) Digital Inclusion of Persons with Disabilities: Practical Framework and Toolbox. (2025, Inklusion Leben) #### United Kingdom Scottish judge becomes first to use computer led voice tech in court after MND diagnosis. (2025, ITVx) ### Social Media #### International News Public Statement Condemning Derogatory and Dehumanising Content Created at Targeting Persons with Albinism. (Jan, Africa Albinism Network) TikTok Adds More Accessibility Features. (2025, SocialMedia Today) _Back tocontents._ ## Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response #### Mozambique People with disabilities need urgent protection amid deadly Mozambique floods. (Jan, Relief Web) _Back tocontents._ ## Economics and Social Protection ### Financial Inclusion #### Ghana Inclusive Finance in Action. “How Ghana’s Financial Sector is Learning to Serve Everyone” (2025, Inklusion leben) #### Kenya High Court’s affirmation of persons with disabilities’ legal capacity a welcome step forward: > “the High Court affirmed that persons with disabilities have the right to obtain the services of private banks on an equal basis with all others, without being subjected to any additional restrictions and while being provided with relevant reasonable accommodations.” (2025, ICJ) ### Social Protection #### Argentina Milei's government announces the closure of the National Disability Agency: “While the Executive assures that benefits will not be cut, uncertainty reigns among the affected families”. (In Spanish, 2025, Últimas Noticias) #### Armenia Armenia's Disability Assessment Reform. “What Armenia has accomplished is not just a technical upgrade, but an institutional shift in how disability is perceived and addressed.” In particular: > “One of the most frequently cited improvements with the new system was the reduced risk of corruption. Multiple respondents, including OPDs, multilateral actors, and assessment professionals, stated that the digitalization and anonymity of the process have limited the scope for human manipulation and improved accountability. The implementation of a functionality score based on standardized criteria, rather than broad disability categories, was also seen as a major step toward objectivity and fairness”. (2025, Center for Inclusive Policy) #### Guyana One-off grant for persons with disabilities – Pres. Ali announces. (2025, News Room Guyana) #### New Zealand Whaikaha, Whaimana: Our Voices Count: “Research by Disability Leadership Canterbury exposes the deep impact of the March 2024 disability system changes on 40,000 people and their whānau.” (Jan, Disability Leadership Canterbury) #### United States Low-Income Disabled Youth Face Significant Challenges Upon Coming of Age. Many Lose Critical Income Support From Supplemental Security Income: > “More than 4 in 10 SSI youth lose their benefits when they turn 18 because they have not demonstrated that they meet SSI’s stringent adult definition of disability, even if they continue to have health conditions that limit their daily activities.” (2025, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities) _Back tocontents._ ## Education and Childhood ### Overview #### Sierra Leone “I always climb the bench like a mountain”: The design failures shutting children with dwarfism out of Sierra Leone’s schools. (2025, Minority Africa) #### United Kingdom Whether the government likes it or not, the Special Needs debate is full of a familiar nastiness. (Jan, Maybe I'm Amazed) #### United States Born Deaf and Blind, She’s Caught in Trump’s Anti-Diversity Crusade: “A program for deafblind children helped 3-year-old Annie Garner, born with poor vision and no ears, learn to communicate.” (2025, New York Times) ### Higher Education #### International News This is our rhythm: academic becoming and realignment in deaf space. (2025, Deaf Studies and Deaf Education) #### Canada How Universities Are Shutting Out Disabled Students and Staff: “Some administrators treat accommodations as a favour—and those requesting them as problems”. (Jan, The Walrus) #### United States The Atlantic’s ‘Accommodation Nation’ is an Ableist Abomination. (2025, Disabled Journalists Association) More Harvard Undergrads Are Reporting Disabilities, Bringing Rate in Line With National Average: > “The rise — from roughly three percent in 2014 to 21 percent in 2024 — brings the share of undergraduate students receiving accommodations at Harvard in line with the national average, which has consistently hovered around 20 percent.” (2025, Harvard Crimson) No, Colleges Do Not “Over-Accommodate”. A certain genre of articles sceptical of higher ed’s disability accommodation process fuels attacks on civil rights. (2025, IHE) _Back tocontents._ ## Employment, Business and Work #### International News Global Disability Legislation Index: a “comprehensive guide to disability legislation across 100 countries, providing employers and employees with critical legal knowledge on disability inclusion.” (Jan, Valuable 500) #### France In France, Rehabilitation Produces a Watchmaker. “Cormac Hanley, a stroke survivor, created his 47Zero watch brand after training at the Òfil Osons l’Emploi horology program.” (2025, New York Times) #### Indonesia Celebrating inclusivity and creativity through Indonesia's batik traditions: “offers a pathway to independence and entrepreneurship for individuals with learning disabilities.” (2025, ILO) #### Serbia Why Serbia is experiencing a decline in job opportunities for persons with disabilities. (2025, NIN) #### United Kingdom A better understanding of disability is key factor in improving inclusion, new BDF findings. (2025, Business Disability Forum) #### United States The Problem With Palantir’s New Neurodivergent Fellowship: > “A ‘neurodivergent fellowship’ at a corporation like Palantir isn’t meaningful inclusion or representation so much as it’s an exercise in having an often punitively surveilled population be complicit in making platforms of weaponized surveillance, to build and be the systems and tools of their own and others’ oppression”. (2025, Mother Jones) Mamdani Pledges More Inclusive Hiring for Disabled New Yorkers. (2025, AbleNews) _Back tocontents._ ## Gender Equality and Women with Disabilities #### Nigeria ‘Every step a struggle:’ Nigerian woman with disabilities leads push for dignity and inclusion. (2025, UN) _Back tocontents._ ## History and Memorial #### United Kingdom In memory of Graham Findlay. (Feb, Disability Wales) Stigma, trust and the history of UK disability policy: > “The UK state has a history of creating and amplifying disability stigma. Politicians have regularly stoked public fears of disabled people, through talk of shirkers and scroungers. Lower-level officials have casually and harmfully judged, ignored and discriminated against disabled people.” (2025, History & Policy) #### United States Leslie Lee III, culture critic and Long COVID advocate, dies at 43. (2025, The Sick Times) Major Victories in Advancing Disability Justice in Massachusetts. “Disabled leaders and our allies force passage of sweeping government transparency bill to confront the tragic untold history of state violence against disabled children and adults.” (2025, (Un)Hidden) 'Don't mourn, organize.' How disability rights advocate Bob Kafka helped shape Austin and the nation. (2025, KUT News) Crip Screens: Countering Psychiatric Media Technologies: > ‘Banner shows how institutions use documentary films, data visualization, network graphs, therapy chatbots, virtual patient training programs, and pharmaceutical advertising to pathologize certain people as “deviant” and “mentally ill.” Those people so categorized have used media technologies toward alternative visions of care. Examining insurgent media and technology efforts in the 1960s and 1970s, Banner shows how women and communities of color worked to wrest away from psychiatry its hold over representing mental distress and pathological categorization.’ (2025, MNG Bookshop) _Back tocontents._ ## Humanitarian, Migrants and Refugees #### Bangladesh Frailty and disability among older adults residing in Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh (Jan, Aging and Health) #### Nigeria ‘Every step a struggle:’ Nigerian woman with disabilities leads push for dignity and inclusion. (2025, UN) #### Uganda Disabled Sudanese refugees in Uganda camps face aid vacuum, advocates say. (2025, Sudan Tribune) _Back tocontents._ ## Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization ### Overview #### Armenia Creating caring homes for children with disabilities: “While society focuses on accessibility of public spaces, very little attention is paid to the most important space – the child’s own home”. (2025, EU Neighbours East) #### Canada Extraordinary measures of sibling worldmaking. Ethnographic research involving disabled and non/disabled siblings: > “Sibling disability worldmaking is a co-creative process in which the siblings collaborate and work together to produce livable lives and habitable worlds for them both. Once parents are no longer primary supports, siblings rely on one another, navigating their roles and relationships in a shared effort to create a new sense of stability. This can happen gradually in fluid ways over time as roles shift, or it can happen in traumatic and jolting ways during times of crisis.” (2025, Medical Anthropology Quarterly) #### New Zealand Family carers win landmark Supreme Court case defining them as homeworkers: > “Caring for my daughter is the most important role I will ever have, but it also replaces services the Government would otherwise need to provide. This judgment makes it clear that when the Government relies on family carers to carry out this work it must also respect our rights as workers, with fair pay, proper protections, and dignity.” (2025, NZ Herald) #### United States Recent Changes to Immigration Policies Have Disastrous Impacts on Disabled People and Long-Term Care. (Jan, AAPD) ### Conditions in Institutions #### New Zealand 20-year-old man dies after staff miss major red flag his bowel had ruptured. “Care staff failed to recognise the severity of his condition or seek timely medical assistance”. (Jan, RNZ News) #### United States Broken Care, Broken Lives: > “State agencies and organizations charged with protecting people with intellectual and developmental disabilities are repeatedly failing residents, putting them at risk of abuse, neglect, and even death.” (2025, Grace Dow Writes) _Back tocontents._ ## International Cooperation #### International News Digital Inclusion of Persons with Disabilities: Practical Framework and Toolbox. (2025, Inklusion Leben) #### Mozambique Mozambique, China maintain close cooperation in supporting persons with disabilities: > “At the event, the Chinese Embassy in Mozambique donated wheelchairs, assistive devices, daily necessities, and food supplies valued at approximately 28,000 U.S. dollars to local persons with disabilities.” (2025, Xinhua) #### Venezuela UNDP Venezuela presents its Disability Inclusion Strategy 2026–2029. (2025, UNDP) _Back tocontents._ ## Justice Systems and Legal Capacity #### Indonesia Disability and Due Process. Indonesia’s Updated Criminal Procedure Code Raises Questions about Access to Justice. (2025, Disability Justice Project) #### Kenya High Court’s affirmation of persons with disabilities’ legal capacity a welcome step forward: > “the High Court affirmed that persons with disabilities have the right to obtain the services of private banks on an equal basis with all others, without being subjected to any additional restrictions and while being provided with relevant reasonable accommodations.” (2025, ICJ) #### Mexico New Guide Aims to Help Realize Potential of Key Legal Capacity Reform. (2025, Human Rights Watch) #### United Kingdom Scottish judge becomes first to use computer led voice tech in court after MND diagnosis. (2025, ITVx) #### United States I’m autistic and have a brain injury. ICE dragged me from my car anyway. Then my nightmare really began. (Feb, Independent) The Danger ICE Poses to the Disabled Community. (Jan, Non-Profit Quarterly) Woman dragged from car by ICE identified as U.S. citizen Aliya Rahman: "I'm disabled trying to go to the doctor up there, that's why I didn't move". (Jan, CBC) A Texas man detained by ICE was his disabled son’s sole caregiver. His son will be laid to rest without him: > “At first, they hoped Maher could be released to provide the 24-hour specialized care for Wael that only he was trained to do. But in Wael’s last days, they were holding hope Maher could at least say goodbye to his son in person.” (Jan, CNN) AAPD Resources and News Sources Amidst ICE Violence. (Jan, AAPD) Democracy Denied for Disabled Americans: Guardianship and the Right To Vote: > “In many states, people under guardianship are automatically barred from voting or may lose their rights at the discretion of a judge or guardian.” (2025, CAP) _Back tocontents._ ## Lived Experience and Opinion #### India In the quiet world of words: “Through creativity, resilience and determination, Aditi Sowmyanarayan is reshaping perceptions of autism and neurodiversity, proving that expression comes in many forms”. (2025, Deccan Herald) #### Trinidad and Tobago Searching for silence: Tinnitus 1 - 0 Trinidad and Tobago. (Feb, Disability Debrief) #### United Kingdom ‘You just feel so light!’: two wheelchair users – one 81, one 25 – on welfare cuts, housing and the joy of swimming. (2025, the Guardian) #### United States Autistic Barbie Doesn’t Represent Me. She Shouldn’t Have to. (Jan, Time) A Take on Disability Pride from LAMN Board Chair, Tye Martin: > “Disability pride is choosing to be present in a body that often demands more than it gives. It is continuing even when nothing about the moment feels empowering. Disability pride looks like waking up and seeing what the next day brings without expectations. The tide will turn and eventually the season will change again.” (2025, LAMN) _Back tocontents._ ## Mobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism #### United Kingdom What happened to the invalid carriage? Before the Motability scheme, disabled people were leased a tiny blue car. (2025, Body Babble) The Politics of Parking “a 4-year research project which seeks to explore how disabled people's everyday ‘encounters’ with others contribute to experiences of oppression, particularly in the context of Blue Badge parking spaces.” For example: > “Two thirds (67%) of disabled people taking part in the survey had experienced hate and harassment in accessible parking spaces. People with chronic illness were particularly likely to report this type of encounter.” (2025, Vera Kubenz) #### United States His Job Is to Make the Subway Accessible. “Quemuel Arroyo, the New York transit system’s chief accessibility officer, has used a wheelchair for half his life. He understands how difficult it is to navigate the subway.” (2025, New York Times) _Back tocontents._ ## Policy and Rights ### Overview #### International News Global Disability Legislation Index: a “comprehensive guide to disability legislation across 100 countries, providing employers and employees with critical legal knowledge on disability inclusion.” (Jan, Valuable 500) #### Europe Interview with MEP Ciaran Mullooly: “We need binding accessibility standards for all new public and private housing”. (2025, EDF) #### India Indian Constitution is ableist. We need to confront its foundational gaps: > ‘Disability remains a ground for “valid” discrimination within the Constitution, in which a person with disability can be removed from her office “for the reason of infirmity of mind and body”.’ (2025, The Indian Express) #### Malta Thirty years on Malta’s disabled community faces the same obstacles. (2025, Newsbook) #### Myanmar Myanmar’s disabled population faces diminishing rights, severe neglect under junta rule. (2025, Mizzima) #### Norway Norway Makes History. “With a clear majority, the Norwegian Parliament voted to incorporate the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) into the Human Rights Act.” (2025, ENIL) #### Paraguay Paraguay begins a new era in the protection of the rights of people with disabilities, with a new law on rights of persons with disabilities. (In Spanish, 2025, Ultima Hora) #### United States Texas and Eight Other States Renew Attack on Section 504 and the Right of Disabled People to Live in their Communities. (Jan, DREDF) ### Assisted Dying and Euthanasia #### Australia Australian ALS Patient Denied Disability Support, Chooses Euthanasia. (Jan, National Review) _Back tocontents._ ## Politics and Elections #### Honduras People with disabilities voting in elections. (In Spanish, 2025, Tiempo) #### South Sudan Disability groups call for inclusion in constitution-making process. (2025, Radio Tamazuj) #### Thailand Concerns raised over election accessibility for disabled voters in Thailand: > “They cite issues such as inadequate access to policy information, insufficient voting aids, and potential confusion over the proposed use of colour-coded ballot papers.” (Jan, Thaiger) #### United States Democracy Denied for Disabled Americans: Guardianship and the Right To Vote: > “In many states, people under guardianship are automatically barred from voting or may lose their rights at the discretion of a judge or guardian.” (2025, CAP) _Back tocontents._ ## Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights #### Cuba A full life for people with disabilities. Reflection on education and, _El derecho de soñar_ , a soap-opera featuring two people with intellectual disabilities in a relationship. (In Spanish, 2025, CubaHora) _Back tocontents._ ## Space Exploration #### International News Engineer becomes first wheelchair user to go to space. (2025, BBC) _Back tocontents._ ## Sport and Paralympics #### International News Unequal access to nature: Few outdoor spaces in Europe and the U.S. accommodate sensory, mental disabilities. (2025, Mongabay) FIFA’s ticketing policy is excluding fans with disabilities from the 2026 World Cup. (2025, Football Supporters Europe) #### United States Super Bowl has new accessibility measures for blind fans. (Feb, NPR) _Back tocontents._

Latest international disability inclusion news across 36 subjects

13.02.2026 19:12 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
You can’t pick palm nuts without your hands getting oily ****Picking the palm nut, by Kinanty Andini****. The hands touch together to form the sign for “community” in Nigerian Sign Language, which is similar to that used in American Sign language. Dear Debriefers, I am Deaf – an identity I ran away from for a long time – but the eventual acceptance of which turned out to be my salvation. The turning point came for me when I got into contact with other Deaf people and the Nigerian Deaf community. These connections were the making of me. But the further I got into the community the more frustrated I became. I got irritated at the disunity, a stereotyped notion of ‘Deaf way’, power games, and more. To understand these tensions more I examined my own experiences and got talking with Deaf friends and leaders. My reporting shows me the transformations we get from coming together, but also the disconnections and corruption in our community. Our community has great fruits, but some of them make a mess in the picking. ## About this edition **Support from readers****lets us tell disabled stories in our own words.** Thanks to Amanda, Clydesider Creative, and Impel Consultancy for new contributions. **Alexander Ogheneruemu** is a disability issues writer, advocate and special educator in Nigeria. **Kinanty Andini** is an illustrator and digital artist from Indonesia. Sign-up for a disability lens on world news Subscribe Email sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup. Weekly in your inbox ## Struggling in solitude Prior to my association with Deaf groups, I endured my Deaf odyssey in solitude, wandering in a hearing world where I just managed to hang in. The disillusionments of having to struggle with deafness in solitude had stifled my hope of a university education – which, logically, should have been my next move after completing secondary school in 2004. My mother operated a restaurant, she needed helping hands, and my circumstances made me a nice fit. I worked long hours waiting on cups, plates and pots. I fetched water, boiled rice, beans, and prepared stews and sauces to be served to hungry customers. Lip-reading helped me cope to a certain extent. But my deafness threw up frictions and frustrations even here. I encountered all kinds of customers – some empathetic towards my deafness; others, cold-hearted. From the latter, I tried to keep a distance. My existence revolved around the business. Often, I teetered dangerously on the brink of nervous breakdown from the stress of daily grinds. But there was a silver lining to those years: I pored over pages of literature, and that wove in me inspiration for the future. ## Discovering Deaf connections It was a decade later that I was introduced to Deaf space. A friend of my mum showed up at the restaurant, a Jehovah’s Witness. Through our friendship she connected me with other Deaf people. One connection led to another and I found myself in a Deaf Whatsapp group. My introduction, couched in delicate English created a stir in the group. One person remarked in pidgin: “ _this one no go dabaru_ [will bring down] _the house with grammar_ ”. These new connections shortly led me to the Initiative for Later Deafened Adults (ILDA), for people who’d acquired speech and language exposure before they became deaf. For the first time, I met a group of Deaf people for whom deafness was both identity and a spur to attainment. It was a whole new world. ## First impressions of unity My connection with the ILDA led me to receiving a scholarship. It was granted by an organisation called Strategies for Advancing and Networking Deaf Africans for Ubuntu (STAND-U). The term _Ubuntu_ was new to me, and I found that it symbolised a shared and united community. This ideal shaped my first impression of Deaf groups in Nigeria. In those early days, the community appeared cohesive. One clear example I remember is where STAND-U and other Deaf elites came together to protest a university that had deregistered a Deaf student on unjustified grounds. ## Resisting sign language The scholarship gave me fresh motivation to resume my stalled education. And I gained admission at the Federal College of Education (Special) in Oyo, a teaching college focussed on special education. I suddenly found myself in an environment steeped in Deaf culture – and surrounded by Deaf folks across a broad continuum. It was quite a culture shock. Assimilation was a slow process, and a struggle especially from the language standpoint. I still had passable speech and residual hearing, and, to my embarrassment now, I had originally looked down on sign language as crude, suitable only for the profoundly deaf. Many avoided me, considering me a ‘hearie’ (a Deaf person with a hearing mindset, or who doesn’t value Deaf culture). Members of the Deaf groups I had joined admonished me to learn sign language. They told me to keep an open mind, and that it would open doors for me. I did, and it went on to become a catalyst for self-discovery and deeper connections. My growing skill in sign language restored the previously lost joys of in-person communication. I went on to learn that the sign language we used is in fact a mixture of different independent languages: American Sign Language, and Nigerian Sign Languages, comprising Yoruba, Hausa and Igbo variants. As well as these undocumented sign languages there are community signs based on natural gestures, as I’ve written more about over at Disability Justice Project. ## Disenchantment, money politics and corruption Slowly, and over time, I began to realise that there was a growing feel of disenchantment with the community as a whole. Despite the _Ubuntu_ philosophy bringing us together, there’s little unity in the Deaf community. Deaf associations seem to operate more like political parties, getting drunk on power and replete with mudslinging and subterfuge. Many of us share concerns about how leaders in the Deaf community dodge accountability or are failing to set a good example. There are allegations of corruption, as leaders appear to corner funds meant for general development. And recent elections to a powerful association saw the use of money to determine the outcomes: through influence of votes with money, and disenfranchising qualified candidates who couldn’t afford the nomination costs. ## Scams and money laundering Some of these scandals are common knowledge, but they rarely get into the press. However one exception to this was in 2024 when a national (and international) leader in the Deaf community was indicted by the United States government. The US Attorney’s Office indicted three individuals (residents in the US) for a “Conspiracy to Launder Over $1 Million from Online Fraud Scams”. One of those charged was the (now ex-) president of the Nigerian National Association of the Deaf, who also held a position in a regional body of the World Federation of the Deaf. ## A microcosm of the bigger community Our community was brought together with noble aspirations. There wasn’t one person I spoke to who didn’t acknowledge that community was a source of blessing. But as some of the old guard told me, when Deaf folks lose trust in it then we will distance themselves. _Ubuntu,_ and collective spirit, benefitted many and brought me out of my wilderness. I worry that we are now less guided by them. Speaking with others, they sought to put these concerns into context. Afolayan Muyiwa, a civil servant in Abuja, told me how “Deaf groups are but a microcosm of the bigger community”. He points to its complexities and how we then choose to mix with those that “align with our dreams”, picking some lessons and discarding others. “It is like sieving.” Many of those I spoke with agreed that Deaf groups are repeating the dynamics in wider society. Regarding corruption, one leader told me: > “Money has always been the motivating factor behind all human endeavours, and that does not exclude the Deaf community.” ## Pressures of community Certain quirks of the Deaf experience, and the smallness of our community, mean that our foibles and their impact are magnified. There are pressures to behave in certain ways, to conform to certain stereotypes of a Deaf person, to follow a “Deaf Way”. If you differ from the norms of the community you are seen as undeafly, you are labeled “fake”, “proud”, or “hearie” – in some cases drawing enmity and opposition. This puts pressure on those who stand out. In Nigeria (and other neighbouring countries) we label this a “Pull Him[/Her] Down” syndrome, an envy and critique of those who are successful and stand out in ways many consider un-Deafly. The PhD syndrome refers to the tendency not to see your peers rise above you, and the sinister actions often employed to stop them doing so, or bring them down. So pervasive within the Deaf community is the PhD syndrome that Deaf E3 designed a series of empowerment workshops to tame its menace. ## Connection or advocacy? The habitual drift of discussions within Deaf groups is another subject of debate. For many groups, the greater interest is in socializing, catching up on society’s trends, and side gossips. Personally, I feel the need for more discussions targeted at deaf-centric topics or development of the community. Ezekiel Okeh, a close friend, agrees that there’s a lost potential here: > “These groups can play the pivotal role of filling the advocacy gap as they [have] members [sufficiently] equipped to communicate with both the larger society and the community. They are Deaf enough to understand Deaf issues and proffer solutions, and at the same time, are literate enough to communicate the needs and solutions to the wider society.” ## Diction, diaspora and domination Another area that politics and difference play out in the Deaf groups is in relation to the English language. “Typical” deafies, those who became deaf before acquiring language, often struggle with English. But among post-lingual deafies are some refined users of English. While that’s a good thing in itself, it’s unfortunate when it becomes, as some see it, a tool for show-off and dominating group conversations. Some have found me wanting in this regard. With a mixture of commendation and sarcasm, people describe me with words like “chief scribe”. I admit I am culpable here, or as one person put it, I am one of the “migraine-giving grammarians in the group”. Questions of language are reinforced by the diaspora factor. Undue prestige is given to comments from group members simply because they are based abroad or have schooled there. Indeed, one elder told me that my contributions in the group, however substantial, would pack more power if I had some overseas exposure backing them. ## “Nigerian Deaf men don’t give women leeway” By default, gender relations in Deaf groups takes on the traditional Nigerian template – men dominate. This is especially true in leadership positions. Edirin, a lawyer who’s been frustrated out of her political ambitions in Deaf space, captured the sentiments of many that I spoke to: > “I hate talking about Deaf issues, especially politically…because no matter how they paint it, Nigerian Deaf men don’t give women leeway in Deaf politics…even positions like women leader [exists] only in mouth – they don’t really have any power.” Edirin went on to explain the tensions in who get ahead: > “Women aspiring to political leadership in Deaf community are those who have come into their own […] educated, not easily pushed around… but these women are hardly allowed to win. The ones being [enabled] into political posts are those who are easy prey for male exploitation.” Unfortunately, one issue in power dynamics between the genders is the issue of sexual exploitation. I’ve been shocked by the stories I’ve heard and their frequency. Men in positions of responsibility harass or take advantage of often younger women. All too often these behaviours get ignored. Power often resides with the predators. And the concerns are dismissed by the community with a “it’s happening everywhere”. Women not finding their place in Deaf groups led to the creation of the Deaf Women Association of Nigeria (DWAN). It was founded over two decades ago by Adedoyin Beyioku-Alase, also known as Mama Deaf. In her words: > “DWAN was a child of necessity, born to fill a gap – the absence of women in Deaf leadership.” Over the years, including through the influence of DWAN and their empowerment initiatives, more Deaf women are finding their feet in the community and leadership roles. ## Evolution and growth I started my reporting on this article peeved at the many things that’ve gone wrong in a community that was my salvation. My frustration drew from the wide gap between my first impressions of Deaf groups and the flaws I discover along the way. While I’m not alone in the discontent with the current state of Deaf groups, it’s been interesting to come across folks who choose to still see the bright side. Their equanimity is infectious. As Dami, DWAN’s national secretary who teaches at the Federal College of Education puts it, “you get what you are looking for”. Or as Femi, an award-winning civil servant calls it, an “evolutionary stage”. He’s optimistic things will take shape. Talking with others about these flaws brought some reassurances that Deaf groups are still evolving. In the words of Richard Ezekiel, a videographer and film maker, “We are still on a path of growth and I’m sure we will get there.” ## You can’t pick palm nuts without your hands getting oily There’s a proverb in Igbo that goes “ _Ị gaghị ewere mkpụrụ nkwụ ma ọ bụrụ na aka gị adịghị mma na mmanụ_ ”: “you can’t pick palm nuts without your hands getting oily”. Success or achievements usually requires some sort of effort or risk. Relating that to Deaf groups, I see one of the lessons I took from writing this article. To partake in the blessings of community means I must also share in its pains. But there are different ways of being in community. I will not follow a “Deaf way”, but commit to be being a “Deaf me”. I believe in a freedom to identify as Deaf without conforming to prevailing assumptions about deafness and Deafies. My place in the community will be dictated by conscience and a commitment to _paying forward_ the blessings received. Seeing the bright side has taught me to be more accommodating to imperfection. And it helped renew my resolve to stay the course within the flawed community that made me. _O dabo,_ good-bye, Alex ## Outro **See Alex's previous writing on the Debrief** : Schisms in the Church, explores the disconnect faced by Deaf worshippers in Nigeria. **For more from Alex** , find him on Linkedin. **For more from Kinanty,** see her website. **Let your friends know**. Sharing the newsletter is how people find it! **Help us do more**. The Debrief is free thanks to reader support. ## Acknowledgements Thanks to Peter for being such a patient editor and mentor – working with you has been one of the best encounters of my writing journey. And to Celestine Fraser for editing support. Thanks to Kinanty Andini for bringing together the Igbo proverb and Nigerian Sign Language in her illustration. To everyone, both friends and thought-leaders of the community (too numerous for naming) who were part of the conversations that shaped this article, a big thank you! Finally, special acknowledgements to the readers and organizations whose donations keep this great newsletter going.

Coming to terms with the liberation and flaws of Deaf community in Nigeria

11.02.2026 13:05 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Connecting the disability community Disability Debrief has received generous funding support from Robert Bosch Stiftung. This support will help the Debrief connect the disability community, provide a platform for voices of disabled people, and put a disability lens on world news. As part of the Robert Bosch Stiftung’s support for the global disability movement, the foundation is making a €70,000 contribution to Disability Debrief. The grant runs over three years, from December 2025 to November 2028. In the words of Apolline Moulaire, Project Manager at Robert Bosch Stiftung: > “The Debrief is accessible, critically honest, personal, and beautifully illustrated. It constantly reminds me how disability intersects with every issue I work on. It has made a difference in how we approach disability in our everyday work, as project managers and also simply as human beings.” Entering into 2026, the global disability movement is facing backlash against diversity issues, the undermining of human rights frameworks and funding cuts with austerity measures. In this challenging context, Disability Debrief connects our community, helps us make sense of our times, and shares the knowledge and resources needed to make change. It is a platform for disabled people to tell our stories in our own words. Robert Bosch Stiftung joins the readers and organisations that support the Debrief, recognising this newsletter as a unique resource in the fight for a better world for disabled people. Sign-up for a disability lens on world news Subscribe Email sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup. Weekly in your inbox

Robert Bosch Stiftung support for Disability Debrief

10.02.2026 14:22 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0
Searching for silence <figure class="kg-card kg-image-card kg-width-wide kg-card-hascaption"><img src="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/2026/02/kinanty-thara.jpg" class="kg-image" alt="A black-and-white digital illustration of a woman in pain, with a red three-headed dog coming out of her ear. The woman is relatively young, has dreadlocks and scrunched face. Red sound waves enter her ear on one side and come out past the creature on the other. " loading="lazy" width="2000" height="1125" srcset="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/size/w600/2026/02/kinanty-thara.jpg 600w, https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/size/w1000/2026/02/kinanty-thara.jpg 1000w, https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/size/w1600/2026/02/kinanty-thara.jpg 1600w, https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/size/w2400/2026/02/kinanty-thara.jpg 2400w" /><figcaption><span style="white-space:pre-wrap">Tharā and Cerberus, by Kinanty Andini</span></figcaption></figure><p>Greetings Debriefers,</p><p>Can you hear it? <em>kuhdrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr…</em></p><p>I write to you, every sentence interrupted by this noise, seemingly growing louder with every keystroke. </p><p>As someone who has been hard of hearing since I was 9 years old, silence has long been one of my dearest companions. But over the past months it has abandoned me, to the point I’ve started to forget what it sounds like. </p><p>On August 14<sup>th</sup> 2024, noises abruptly entered my head, a tinnitus resulting from progressive sensorineural hearing loss.</p><p>I named them Cerberus, after the three-headed dog. In Greek mythology, Cerberus guards the gates of hell, to keep the dead in and the living out. For me, he keeps the noise in and silence out.</p><p>Since that day in 2024 I’ve been on an unending search, consumed by research and home remedies, ironically sobered by alcohol and meds. All this in Trinidad and Tobago, a country that hardly recognises disability accessibility. </p><p>And my search for silence has thrust me even further into an unforgiving world of unwelcome sound.</p><h2 id="about-this-edition">About this edition</h2><p><strong>Tharā Gabriel</strong> is a hard of hearing administration and communications professional from the southernmost Caribbean island, Trinidad and Tobago.</p><p><strong>Kinanty Andini </strong>is an illustrator and digital artist from Indonesia.</p><p><strong>The Debrief publishes disabled stories, told in our own words, thanks to </strong><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/support/" rel="noreferrer"><strong>support from readers</strong></a><strong>. </strong></p><div class="kg-card kg-signup-card kg-width-regular " style="background-color:#dae5f7;display:none"> <div class="kg-signup-card-content"> <div class="kg-signup-card-text kg-align-center"> <p class="kg-signup-card-subheading" style="color:#000000"><span style="white-space:pre-wrap">Sign-up for a disability lens on world news</span></p> <div class="kg-signup-card-fields"> <input class="kg-signup-card-input" id="email" type="email" required="true" placeholder="Your email" /> <button class="kg-signup-card-button kg-style-accent" style="color:#FFFFFF" type="submit"> <span class="kg-signup-card-button-default">Subscribe</span> <span class="kg-signup-card-button-loading"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" height="24" width="24" viewbox="0 0 24 24"> <circle cx="4" cy="12" r="3"></circle> <circle cx="12" cy="12" r="3"></circle> <circle cx="20" cy="12" r="3"></circle> </svg></span> </button> </div> <div class="kg-signup-card-success" style="color:#000000"> Email sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup. </div> <div class="kg-signup-card-error" style="color:#000000"></div> <p class="kg-signup-card-disclaimer" style="color:#000000"><span style="white-space:pre-wrap">Weekly in your inbox</span></p> </div> </div> </div><h2 id="indifferent-to-sound">Indifferent to sound</h2><p>Up until the age of nine I had what hearies would refer to as <a href="https://limpingchicken.com/2021/03/18/thara-gabriel-neither-deafie-nor-oral-what-am-i/"><u>“normal” hearing</u></a>. Then at the end of my primary school years I was granted <a href="https://limpingchicken.com/2021/02/15/thara-gabriel-life-as-a-hard-of-hearing-person-in-trinidad-and-tobago-yuh-deaf-awah/"><u>the hereditary gift</u></a><u> </u>of progressive sensorineural hearing loss. </p><p>My world slowly began to change. In my specific case, I was “treble deaf”, meaning I could…</p><p><em>crweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee</em>… </p><p>… not hear higher frequencies but could easily hear very low frequencies. Although I could already read lips, conversations became much harder to follow and what I can now term “social regression” slowly began to ensue. </p><p>Familial interactions were the easiest, along with the upkeep of a few choice friends whose voices happened to be on a reasonable frequency. In retrospect, this is probably why I engaged with so many male friends rather than females – they were a lot easier to understand. (Take note mother…it was not predominantly for any unsavoury reasons *side eye*) </p><p>This was basically my life until the end of my teenage years – adaptation. Learning sign language was not practical and purchasing hearing aids even less so. </p><p>I was indifferent to sound as others heard it; a firm believer that I wasn’t missing out on anything and that I would go merrily along my life without ever choosing to “hear” more than I could. </p><h2 id="turning-off-my-ears">Turning off my ears</h2><p>One added benefit of my hard of hearing life has always been controlled peace – I like to refer to it as turning off my ears. I can simply look away and stop concentrating.</p><p><em>kyeeaow! kyeeaow! kyeeaow! kyeeaow! kyeeaow!...</em></p><p>Every Deaf and hard of hearing person knows how tiring social and professional interactions are.  Our brains have to work much harder to process information, causing mental and physical exhaustion.</p><p>At times we become so fatigued, just concentrating to formulate a simple response is unbearable. In professional settings there is less of a choice, so I usually concentrated until it turned into a migraine, and then maybe I popped a pill.</p><p>And then I could turn off my ears. Or I used to be able to.</p><h2 id="every-sound-a-fresh-assault">Every sound a fresh assault</h2><p>I had a short stint with some cheap hearing aids during my BSc at University. I detested them, and not being able to escape was a huge reason for that.</p><p>Every sound was electronic and buzzy. I could not turn away from a spirited conversation, a door slamming or a desk closing with these scratchy implements buried in my ear canal. Cover my ears and cue the high-pitched feedback! </p><p>Mosquitoes swarming, water running, pages turning, feet shuffling, every sound a fresh assault on my unaccustomed brain. I could not process these new noises in time to understand them before needing to respond. Sound was simply a distraction that prevented me from “hearing” the way I did without those godforsaken aids. </p><h2 id="lip-reading-and-winging-it">Lip-reading and winging it</h2><p>I swore off the hearing aids and dedicated myself to a life of “<a href="https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/article/2024/aug/07/like-my-mother-i-am-hard-of-hearing-decades-on-i-face-the-same-problems-she-did"><u>lip-reading and winging it</u></a>”.</p><p>To put things in perspective, based on my most recent audiogram, if you played me a voice recording, I’d hear and understand only 20% of what you’ve said. </p><p>But <a href="https://limpingchicken.com/2021/04/27/thara-gabriel-but-you-dont-look-deaf/"><u>if you faced me and I read your lips</u></a>, I’d hear and understand from 60% even up to 100% of what you’ve said. </p><p>How could I take phone calls? Through voice matching an individual’s accent, voice tone, and frequency to my own understanding of what specific words sound like. I rummage through my mental filing cabinet of sound memories, contextualise the conversation, and activate rapid sound processing…all within a matter of seconds. </p><h2 id="a-not-so-silent-partner">A not-so-silent partner</h2><p>But remember that pesky little word “progressive” I mentioned earlier? Well, it turns out it has a lesser-known partner called TINNITUS. </p><p>If you take a look at my historical audiograms, you’d notice… </p><p><em>heeleelee heeleeloo heeleelee heeleeloo heeleelee heeleelooooooo</em></p><p>… the reading looks like a disc slowly sinking in water and… it’s almost at the bottom. </p><p>I learned about tinnitus in great detail since gaining my credentials in Occupational Health and Safety. And some of my family members, both hearing and hard of hearing, have complained about the occasional ringing in the ear which usually goes away after a short while.</p><p>But I am an overachiever.</p><h2 id="dis-in-my-head"><em>Dis in my head?</em></h2><p>August 14<sup>th</sup>, 2024, started an evening like any other. I lay on the couch after a long day of work, candles lit, drinking a giant cup of tea, reading Nikita Gill’s <em>The Girl and the Goddess. </em>Billie Eilish crooned in the background. Bliss. </p><p>Suddenly there was a cacophony of noises that seemed to be coming from somewhere outside, to the left. I bolted upright, almost throwing my tea off the table. I stared at the window – where could it be coming from?</p><p>At first I thought there were dogs howling or fighting in the street. But then it started sounding like a bird screeching. Or was it the mole crickets? <em>It hadda be d crickets, dey relly out in force dis time ah year</em>.</p><p><em>rooowroowrooow! krudrruhuuuuuuu eeeeeeyoaw! </em></p><p>Minutes pass. <em>A crapaud</em>? <em>Somebody galvanize ain’t bolt down properly on dey roof? Meh neighbour son playin in d yard?</em> <em>Chirren love to scrape tings</em>. Music from a car in the distance? Did I leave my computer on inside? <em>No really, wah d fuck is dis and why it not stoppin or gettin quieter? </em></p><p><em>Buh wait, why I only hearin it on d left side? Dis in my head? </em></p><p><em>oowoooooocululeelooooo skreeeeeeeeeeeeeeee </em></p><h2 id="like-an-owl-but-higher">Like an owl, but higher</h2><p>These unearthly sounds and my inner monologue went on for hours. Sleep did not find me that night. My practiced peace was shattered.</p><p>The next day I was in such a foul mood, the sounds lessened a bit but not by much. I got on the phone with my sisters and friends and walked around my entire apartment to ask them if they were hearing any noises. No “kuhdrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr”?</p><p>A friend came over to lime and I asked, “you hearin a shrill warblin sound…like ah owl but higher?” No, he responds, with a confused stare. </p><p><em>crweeeeeeeeeeeeeeee</em></p><p>And so I turned to Google:</p><blockquote>Can ear infections cause ringing in the ear?<br /><br />Can tinnitus only be in one ear?<br /><br />Is there a cure/home remedy for tinnitus?<br /><br />What is Tinnitus Sound Therapy?<br /><br />ENTs near me <br /><br />Cost of a hearing test in Trinidad…</blockquote><h2 id="any-noise-to-beat-the-noise">Any noise to beat the noise</h2><p>The irony is that one remedy to a wickedly intrusive sound is even more sound. Over the following weeks, I vacillated between tinnitus and trying every single tinnitus sound therapy playlist on Spotify. </p><p>White noise (TV static), pink noise (rain sounds), blue noise (steam hissing), green noise (ocean sounds), any noise to beat the noise. </p><p>I went to bed with a speaker blaring <a href="https://open.spotify.com/track/2Br2A6mncTPfRXdae9m90X?si=9a85ae9bf4094655"><u>Muffled Sleep Noises by Hayden Bell</u></a>; repetitive factory machine noises, an endless shhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh and <em>gruh ehhh gruh ehhh gruh ehhh gruh ehhh.</em> Volume set to 100… I’m pretty sure my neighbour had some questions. </p><p>This in turn caused migraines which triggered my vertigo which meant insomnia. I tried something calmer, <a href="https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2jlwW7h69v12IhgteCz14a?si=8Zjburp5RRCRu8R5G9avVg"><u>Sleep Music for Tinnitus by Little Symphony Wellness</u></a>; minor relief. </p><h2 id="searching-for-a-cure">Searching for a cure</h2><p>On the internet people recommend meditation techniques and lifestyle changes as tinnitus remedies. But there are different causes of tinnitus. Yoga might be great for tinnitus caused by anxiety; for tinnitus caused by hearing loss, not at all.</p><p>I had a checkup and hearing test. I was told the pressure in my ear was fine, there was no buildup, the canal was clear and there were no signs of inflammation or infection. Due to my level of hearing loss, I would need a pair of hearing aids. </p><h2 id="tinnitus-sound-therapy-rinse-repeat">Tinnitus. Sound Therapy. Rinse. Repeat.</h2><p>A cycle begins. During the day I sit down to work sleepless, amped up on coffee, struggling to concentrate over the cries of the now constant companion in my ear. I am thankful for the stream of traffic on the nearby boulevard <em>rumble rev beep whoosh vroom</em>.<em> </em></p><p>At night, as outside quiets, it comes raging back. I twist and turn in bed, covering my left ear - even though I am fully aware the sounds aren’t external. I try alcohol or drugs for pain relief and nausea, anything to sleep through the unnatural symphony. </p><p><em>kudrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrroowoooooocululeelooooo skreeeeeeeeeeeeeeee. </em></p><p>I fall asleep crying to Linkin Park blasting from my record player. The next day a friend wants to hang out – <em>I can’t be around people right now; I can’t converse because it’s difficult to hear over the sound of the vintage telephone constantly ringing in my ear</em>. </p><p><em>pudrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr </em></p><p>Another night, isolation. Another day, tinnitus. Another night, another day, tinnitus tinnitus tinnitus…alone and surrounded all at once.</p><h2 id="%E2%80%9Cwhat-does-it-sound-like-today%E2%80%9D">“What does it sound like today”</h2><p>I think enviously of Van Gogh and what he did to his ear. My friends and family check-in. </p><p>“Don’t give in to this tinnitus eh!” <em>I’m trying.</em> </p><p>“What does it sound like today?” <em>The Greek three-headed hound Cerberus raging at the gates of hell</em>. </p><p>Like dogs fighting in the street, yet with some otherworldly cadence. </p><h2 id="is-this-my-life-now">Is this my life now?</h2><p>Could I make it through the day in office? Can I concentrate in this Zoom meeting? Eyes darting to every corner of the room, missing the closed captions, cringing because the voices aren’t the right frequency, so instead I hear <em>kyeeaow!skreeeeeeeeeekudrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. </em>Nothing registers. </p><p>I hear my name and frantically scroll through the transcript so I can respond. Can I still do this? What good is a Communications Consultant who can’t communicate? Is this my life now? Will EADGBE still sound the same on my guitar? Will I be able to hear Billie Eilish sing the bridge of The Greatest when I attend her concert in Spain? IS THIS MY LIFE NOW?! </p><p>After six months of torture, I decided to accept that I needed hearing aids to stop hearing. </p><h2 id="struggling-in-trinidad-and-tobago">Struggling in Trinidad and Tobago</h2><p>It took months to even hear back on the possibility of an appointment. There are only <a href="http://www.slaatt.com/licensed-therapists.html"><u>two licensed audiologists</u></a> in this country of approximately 1.5 million people. </p><p>One of my hard of hearing sisters lives in Canada and wears hearing aids. She stepped in to help. On the same day she reached out to her clinic, they got back.</p><p>Her clinic went above and beyond to try to find a way to get me a pair of hearing aids. But they encountered obstacle after obstacle. Hearing aid batteries are considered “dangerous goods” when being shipped by air, because of their lithium batteries. It wasn’t possible to get them from Canada.</p><p>All the while: <em>eehhhhh oooo ooooo eeehhhhh oooo oooo,</em> my resident clan of hyenas continuously cackle for my attention. </p><h2 id="sounds-i%E2%80%99d-never-heard-before">Sounds I’d never heard before</h2><p>A long-awaited European trip led to the added benefit of finding a suitable audiologist and hearing aid provider. After nine months of torturous suffering, having carried Cerberus, my tinnitus baby to full term, I finally found a reprieve. </p><p>In Amsterdam I could buy a fantastic pair of Starkey Edge AI hearing aids from the kind-hearted team at Makker. These hearing aids “mimic the brain’s auditory cortex … reducing noise in real-time with advanced and powerful AI at the edge.” And the price surely reflects that. </p><p>I knew it would be expensive, and that local insurance would not cover a foreign service provider. With savings and a bank loan I could accumulate the €3,600, the cost of over half a year’s rent. </p><p>My pockets hurt, but in an instant the nine months of tinnitus was gone! A wave of shock, relief, surprise and confusion washed over me. All of a sudden I could hear sounds I’d never heard before. </p><p>The first time I tried hearing aids, I hated that. But this time I thought, great! What’s better? Cerberus, my constant companion, was gone. </p><h2 id="the-world-is-so-loud">The world is so loud</h2><p>Well, not entirely. Months have passed as a newfound hearing-aid wearer. I can’t wear them while sleeping, nor showering or swimming. </p><p>As I pop them out, <em>kudrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrroowoooooocululeelooooo</em> Cerberus returns, but nothing else does. Everything I could have heard before now sounds like I am underwater. </p><p>The conversations I carried on just by lip-reading and my usual hearing are now a lot more difficult. My 20% feels like 8%. Hearing with my hearing aids has made me less capable without them. I feel deafer.</p><p>The fine print on the hearing aids says they take a while to get used to, wear them everyday to get accustomed to the new sounds. </p><p>But the world is so loud. While I was able to hear Billie sing The Greatest, I also heard every single one of the 20,000 other fans singing. Painful. </p><p>That fan rattles so much. That air conditioning unit definitely needs servicing. Is that a lizard making that noise! </p><p>People talk so much and the sounds never stop.</p><h2 id="still-yearning-for-silence">Still yearning for silence</h2><p>I think those who hear everything are at a disadvantage because it’s constant; there’s no relief. </p><p>I sit here with my fancy hearing aids watching me. They’re docked in their little charging garage which simultaneously disinfects them with ultraviolet light. </p><p>Cerberus is alive and well; now almost a dependable companion and a welcome reprieve from life in the hearing world. </p><p>Which discomfort do I prefer? I was accosted by sound and then forced to chase even more sound to find a relief that comes with a different set of sounds? SOUND?! I’ve had enough of sound. </p><p><em>Puhdrrrrrrrrrrrr</em></p><p>Tharā and Cerberus     </p><h2 id="help-shape-the-directions-of-the-debrief">Help shape the directions of the Debrief</h2><p>Please respond to the <a href="https://forms.gle/WBL1HCeGo27enjHt7" rel="noreferrer">reader survey</a> if you haven't already. </p><h2 id="outro">Outro</h2><p><strong>For more from Tharā</strong>, find her <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/thar%C4%81-gabriel/" rel="noreferrer">on Linkedin</a>. </p><p><strong>For more from Kinanty, </strong>see <a href="https://kinantyandini.com/" rel="noreferrer">her website.</a></p><p><strong>Further reading</strong>. There is a <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/debrief/" rel="noreferrer">back catalogue</a> of Debrief newsletters online, as well as a <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/" rel="noreferrer">library of disability news</a> from 170+ countries.</p><p><strong>Let your friends know</strong>. Sharing the newsletter is how people find it!</p><p><strong>Help us do more</strong>. The Debrief is free thanks to reader <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/support/" rel="noreferrer">support</a>.</p><h2 id="acknowledgements">Acknowledgements</h2><p>Sincere thanks to Peter for sharing his lived experiences and helping me to do a vulnerable self-inventory on the impacts of my progressive disability. His editing insights and sincerity made writing this piece reflective, yet fun.</p><p>To Kinanty Andini for the illustration capturing Cerberus in all his glory, and me in my agony.</p><p>To all my fellow Debriefers for having the courage to share your stories with us, and all the organizations whose support allows us to continue to do so.</p><p>To my sister Kalyan, Shelly and Lucas (Community Hearing Care, Ontario, CA), and Nathalie and Lonneke (Makker Hoortoestellen, Amsterdam, NL) for their dedication and care in helping me access hearing aids.</p><p>To my sister Amirah for being my ever-faithful voice-note transcriber, phone-call impersonator and speech translator, and for accompanying me to chronicle my first hearing aid appointment on her indelible Polaroids.</p><p>To my sister Sana, and my friend Sheneice for their daily check-ins to make sure I was still alive and fighting.</p><p>And thanks to everyone else who has shared some small but memorable part of my journey.</p>

Tinnitus 1 - 0 Trinidad and Tobago

04.02.2026 13:11 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
“People mutually helping each other” <figure class="kg-card kg-image-card kg-width-wide kg-card-hascaption"><img src="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/2026/01/sonaksha-songs.jpg" class="kg-image" alt="Illustration of a person's silhouette in Myanmar's landscape, but covered with splashes and scribbles of red and crimson. The person walks with crutches and from them shines a ray of yellow light, on top of the red splashes. The ray is filled with musical notes, leaves, a bird flying and the three finger salute. The background is in shades of green and magenta, with golden pagodas peeking through towards the skyline. " loading="lazy" width="1920" height="1080" srcset="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/size/w600/2026/01/sonaksha-songs.jpg 600w, https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/size/w1000/2026/01/sonaksha-songs.jpg 1000w, https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/size/w1600/2026/01/sonaksha-songs.jpg 1600w, https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/content/images/2026/01/sonaksha-songs.jpg 1920w" /><figcaption><span style="white-space:pre-wrap">A song for freedom, by Sonaksha</span></figcaption></figure><p>Dear Debriefers,</p><p>We're back to global disability reading and resources today. But before you dive in, please do:</p><ul><li><strong>Fill in the </strong><a href="https://forms.gle/WBL1HCeGo27enjHt7" rel="noreferrer"><strong>Debrief reader survey</strong></a><strong>.</strong></li></ul><p>Feedback helps me see what's working and what's not. Thanks to those who have already responded!</p><p>As for today, we look at the efforts being made by and for disabled people in Myanmar, the latest questions and answers in research, and confidence and distrust in business.</p><p>Plus, renewed support from the Debrief to other disability media, and a book giveaway for readers in the United States.</p><p><strong>Browse highlights below, or explore the full guide of 89 hand-picked links: </strong>curated across <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/" rel="noreferrer">26 countries</a> or <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/" rel="noreferrer">38 subjects</a>. This edition picks up from the <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/debrief/theatre-of-contradictions/" rel="noreferrer">update in January</a>.</p><h2 id="about-this-edition">About this edition</h2><p><strong>We can share disability news thanks to </strong><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/support/" rel="noreferrer"><strong>support from readers</strong></a><strong>. </strong>Thanks to <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/debrief/mercy-on-yourself/#%E2%80%9Ci-had-to-find-my-own-resources-to-get-better%E2%80%9D" rel="noreferrer">K. Li</a> for another incredibly generous donation, and to Lucy and Vishal for continued support.</p><p><strong>Peter Torres Fremlin </strong>is editor of Disability Debrief and is from the UK.</p><p><strong>Sonaksha </strong>is an illustrator and designer from India.</p><div class="kg-card kg-signup-card kg-width-regular " style="background-color:#dae5f7;display:none"> <div class="kg-signup-card-content"> <div class="kg-signup-card-text kg-align-center"> <p class="kg-signup-card-subheading" style="color:#000000"><span style="white-space:pre-wrap">Sign-up for a disability lens on world news</span></p> <div class="kg-signup-card-fields"> <input class="kg-signup-card-input" id="email" type="email" required="true" placeholder="Your email" /> <button class="kg-signup-card-button kg-style-accent" style="color:#FFFFFF" type="submit"> <span class="kg-signup-card-button-default">Subscribe</span> <span class="kg-signup-card-button-loading"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" height="24" width="24" viewbox="0 0 24 24"> <circle cx="4" cy="12" r="3"></circle> <circle cx="12" cy="12" r="3"></circle> <circle cx="20" cy="12" r="3"></circle> </svg></span> </button> </div> <div class="kg-signup-card-success" style="color:#000000"> Email sent! Check your inbox to complete your signup. </div> <div class="kg-signup-card-error" style="color:#000000"></div> <p class="kg-signup-card-disclaimer" style="color:#000000"><span style="white-space:pre-wrap">Weekly in your inbox</span></p> </div> </div> </div><h2 id="%E2%80%9Cpeople-mutually-helping-each-other%E2%80%9D">“People mutually helping each other”</h2><p>The military coup in Myanmar has left the country in a grinding civil war since 2021. Tom Andrews, the UN expert on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, documents the <a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/documents/thematic-reports/ahrc61crp1-hidden-crisis-disability-rights-post-coup-myanmar-advance?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">grim situation people with disabilities face</a> and the efforts being made to support disabled people there.</p><p>As well as the existing challenges of disability in Myanmar – including the stigma and discrimination – the civil war have made things even harder. But I found Andrews' report particularly interesting on the situation of organisations supporting disabled people.</p><p>The military junta has cracked down on civil society, and international donor support has evaporated. Organisations are facing an “impossible choice” of submitting to junta control or to carry on, running the risk of arrest and imprisonment. Many have either gone underground or “been forced into exile”.</p><p>But amidst these setbacks, organisations, many led by disabled people themselves, continue work. And even some new ones are started. One young man who lost his leg while serving in the opposition People's Defense Force shared:</p><blockquote>“To encourage other people, you need to provide inspiration and a practical way for rehabilitation. That is why I established [my organization]. We give opportunities to the [disability] community. ... If I am able help 10 people. Then those 10 people can help 10 people. Then [assistance] will be spread to 100 people, and they can help others. … We can provide a community that collectively supports each other; people mutually helping each other.”</blockquote><p>And in a similar spirit, Andrews calls upon the international community to address the “hidden crisis facing persons with disabilities in Myanmar”.</p><ul><li>See previously on the Debrief, <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/debrief/song-for-freedom/" rel="noreferrer">A Song for Freedom</a>, where an activist shared the situation of disabled people in Myanmar's civil war.</li></ul><h2 id="questions-and-answers">Questions and answers </h2><p><strong>In Vietnam,</strong> <a href="https://www.ilo.org/publications/building-inclusive-future-social-protection-catalyst-disability-empowerment?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">coverage of disability benefits</a> has “more than tripled over the last 15 years”, according to a brief from the International Labour Organisation. There are still serious gaps, including the money not being enough, but now 1.7 million people in the country get disability allowances.</p><p><strong>In France</strong>, more <a href="https://www.francebleu.fr/infos/societe/les-enfants-en-situation-de-handicap-sont-de-plus-en-plus-scolarises-avec-les-autres-eleves-en-milieu-ordinaire-3344070?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">disabled children are in mainstream education</a>. 64% of children aged 6 to 15 getting disability-related support are now in mainstream schools, compared to 47% in 2010. On the face of it this is good news but there are questions about the extent of support the mainstream settings provide, so it's not necessarily better for the children in question. </p><p><strong>Meanwhile, the International Centre for Evidence in Disability (ICED) </strong>in the UK is <a href="https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/research/centres/international-centre-evidence-disability/news/475611/celebrating-15-years-iced?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">celebrating 15 years</a> since its foundation. As well as reflections on the research the centre has produced, co-director Tom Shakespeare shares the questions still not answered:</p><blockquote>“I would love to find out more about how people live with pain; I have a hunch that many families affected by disability spend money on medical interventions which do not work; I want to find out whether individuals with disabilities are isolated or connected. Both words and numbers might help us answer those questions. There is much more that needs to be done in the next 15 years.”</blockquote><h2 id="%E2%80%9Cstrong-expectation-of-a-positive-outcome%E2%80%9D">“Strong expectation of a positive outcome”</h2><p><strong>Inner confidence to challenge outer barriers. </strong>PurpleSpace, friends of the Debrief, have launched a video course to “<a href="https://www.purplespace.org/learning-resources?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">develop the inner confidence of every disabled employee</a>”. They define confidence as a “strong expectation of a positive outcome” and see it as a skill that can be developed by the employee. </p><p>I think this is an interesting approach. Yes, disabled people face untold discrimination and barriers in trying to get work. But that just makes it more important that we develop the skills to navigate them. </p><p><strong>A power dynamic that is often extractive. </strong>Meanwhile, Tilting the Lens, also friends of the Debrief, have launched an “<a href="https://tiltingthelens.com/about-us/reports/adaptive-fashion/?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">open-source playbook for fashion brands</a>” to engage with disabled consumers. They see a key challenge in the “trust deficit”:</p><blockquote>“the Disabled community distrusts and is frustrated with the [fashion] industry due to persistent issues that remain unaddressed. Disabled customers struggle to access products in physical stores and online. Product offerings are very limited and advertising practices are often poor. Disabled people are often valued by the industry only as customers, with inaccessible education systems and employment opportunities [... This] fails to develop trust and creates a power dynamic that is often extractive.”</blockquote><h2 id="%E2%80%9Cthe-words-did-not-come-out%E2%80%9D">“The words did not come out”</h2><p><strong>“The words did not come out”</strong>. In Nigeria, Esohe Iyare shares how people who stutter <a href="https://minorityafrica.org/the-words-did-not-come-out-nigerians-who-stutter-navigate-work-in-speech-centric-professions/?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">navigate barriers at work</a>. </p><p><strong>“No one has the right to decide whether someone can be a good mother.” </strong>A documentary from DW on <a href="https://www.dw.com/en/forced-sterilization-in-europe-denying-motherhood-rights/video-74956841?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">forced sterilization in Europe</a>, which is still legal in 12 EU countries. Activist shares her campaigning and networks across Europe challenging this practice.</p><p><strong>80 years of change</strong>.<strong> </strong>In the UK, my friend Phil Friend shares a retrospective on the situation of disabled people <a href="https://www.activityalliance.org.uk/news/10288-disability-history-month-my-80-years-of-change" rel="noreferrer">through his lifetime</a>. He takes us from his start in segregated education, to disability sport and the new attitudes, advocacy and legislation:</p><blockquote>“My education took place in residential boarding schools for disabled children. These were well-meaning places, but nobody would mistake them for the fast track to university. I never sat an exam. Physical education was nonexistent. We did basket weaving and macramé instead. (Two skills I’ve rarely been asked to demonstrate since). Expectations were low, and the outside world felt a long way off.”</blockquote><h2 id="%E2%80%9Cfeeling-of-community-and-solidarity%E2%80%9D">“Feeling of community and solidarity”</h2><p>Thanks to the generous support you readers give to the Debrief, it is in a position to pay forward to other creators. I've been able to <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/debrief/magic-corners/" rel="noreferrer">renew</a> contributions of £500 each to two of my favourite writers on disability-related issues from the Global South. </p><p>By chance they are both from India, and they each open unique windows onto the world. Do join me in following and supporting their work:</p><ul><li><a href="https://reframingdisability.substack.com/?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer"><strong>Reframing Disability</strong></a><strong> by Priti Salian. </strong>Priti shares guidance on disability storytelling and brilliant profiles of disabled creators from around the world.</li><li><a href="https://www.sanitybytanmoy.com/?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer"><strong>Sanity</strong></a><strong> by Tanmoy Goswami.</strong> Tanmoy tells stories about mental health through his own intensely-related lived experience and original research. </li></ul><p>Tanmoy shared with me what this support means for his work, and how sticking together helps us get further:</p><blockquote>“The biggest gift that the Debrief has given me is the feeling of community and solidarity. I have been writing Sanity for 5 years now, and it can get really lonely. Having the Debrief in my corner makes me feel seen. It inspires me to stay true to my values as a creator.”</blockquote><p>And, as ever, I urge organisations working on disability advocacy to seriously consider supporting disability media and disabled creators. The modern media landscape increasingly hinges on individuals' ability to reach new audiences. We need you in our corner.</p><h2 id="%E2%80%9Call-our-stuff-is-not-the-same%E2%80%9D">“All our stuff is not the same”</h2><p><strong>Song and dance for assistive technology</strong>: Apple's video “<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmFPWxjmnqE" rel="noreferrer">I'm not Remarkable</a>”: “I need stuff. And you need stuff. And all our stuff is not the same”.</p><p><strong>And in case you missed previous Debriefs...</strong></p><ul><li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/debrief/onwards-into-the-unknown/" rel="noreferrer">Onwards into the unknown</a>: my disabled look back on 2025, with its setbacks and, for me, a new love...</li><li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/debrief/broken-then-blooming/" rel="noreferrer">Broken then blooming</a>: Debrief readers write back with their visions of a future where disability rights are real.</li></ul><p>All best,</p><p>Peter</p><h2 id="outro">Outro</h2><p><strong>Further reading</strong>. All the links from these curated editions go into the <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/" rel="noreferrer">Debrief library</a>, which now has over 7,100 links from over 170 countries. See below for contents from this month's update.</p><p><strong>Let your friends know</strong>. Sharing the newsletter is how people find it!</p><p><strong>For more from Sonaksha, </strong>see <a href="https://www.sonaksha.com/" rel="noreferrer">their website</a>.</p><p><strong>Connect</strong>. Get <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/contact/" rel="noreferrer">in touch</a>. You can find me on <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-torres-fremlin/?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">Linkedin</a> and <a href="https://bsky.app/profile/desibility.bsky.social?ref=disabilitydebrief.org" rel="noreferrer">Bluesky</a>.</p><p><strong>Help us do more</strong>. The Debrief is free thanks to reader <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/support/" rel="noreferrer">support</a>.</p><h2 id="recent-news">Recent News</h2> <p>This update has 89 curated links from 26 countries and regions, organized across 38 subjects.</p> <p>You can explore it organized by <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/">subject</a> or by <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/">country</a>.</p> <h3 id="subjects">Subjects</h3> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#access">Accessibility and Design</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#age">Ageing</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#at">Assistive Technology</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#blm">Black Lives Matter and Racial justice</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#covid">COVID-19</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#civil">Civil Society and Community</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#climate">Climate Crisis and Environment</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#comms">Communication and Language</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#cult">Culture, Entertainment and Media</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#data">Data and Research</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#digital">Digital Accessibility and Technology</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#drr">Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#educ">Education and Childhood</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#employ">Employment, Business and Work</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#gender">Gender Equality and Women with Disabilities</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#health">Health</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#history">History and Memorial</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#hum">Humanitarian, Migrants and Refugees</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#indep">Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#intcoop">International Cooperation</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#justice">Justice Systems and Legal Capacity</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#lived">Lived Experience and Opinion</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#mental">Mental Health</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#mobility">Mobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#policy">Policy and Rights</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#politics">Politics and Elections</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#relation">Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026/#sport">Sport and Paralympics</a></li> </ul> <h3 id="countries">Countries</h3> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#region-int">Global</a> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#int">International News</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#region-africa">Africa</a> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#africa">Africa</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#burkina">Burkina Faso</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#kenya">Kenya</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#nigeria">Nigeria</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#uganda">Uganda</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#zambia">Zambia</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#region-asia">Asia</a> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#bangladesh">Bangladesh</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#india">India</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#indonesia">Indonesia</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#japan">Japan</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#myanmar">Myanmar</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#oman">Oman</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#vietnam">Vietnam</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#region-europe">Europe</a> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#europe">Europe</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#france">France</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#ireland">Ireland</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#portugal">Portugal</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#slovakia">Slovakia</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#sweden">Sweden</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#switzerland">Switzerland</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#uk">United Kingdom</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#region-northamerica">North America</a> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#usa">United States</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#region-oceania">Oceania</a> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#australia">Australia</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#newzealand">New Zealand</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#region-southamerica">South America</a> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries/#argentina">Argentina</a></li> </ul> </li> </ul> <h2 id="acknowledgements">Acknowledgements</h2><p>Thanks to Sonaksha for the beautiful illustration of activism in Myanmar.</p><p>And as always many thanks to everyone who shares links, news and reports, and the readers and organisations whose support makes this work possible.</p>

Disability rights in Myanmar and curated news from 26 countries

28.01.2026 16:47 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Disability news, January 2026, by country <p><strong><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/">Library</a> &gt; January 2026</strong></p> <p><em>This page is organized by country, you can also see links organized by <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026">subject</a>.</em></p> <p>This update has 89 curated links from 26 countries and regions, organized across 38 subjects.</p> <h2 id="contents">Contents</h2> <ul> <li> <p><a href="#region-int">Global</a></p> <ul> <li><a href="#int">International News</a></li> </ul> </li> <li> <p><a href="#region-africa">Africa</a></p> <ul> <li> <p><a href="#africa">Africa</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#burkina">Burkina Faso</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#kenya">Kenya</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#nigeria">Nigeria</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#uganda">Uganda</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#zambia">Zambia</a></p> </li> </ul> </li> <li> <p><a href="#region-asia">Asia</a></p> <ul> <li> <p><a href="#bangladesh">Bangladesh</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#india">India</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#indonesia">Indonesia</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#japan">Japan</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#myanmar">Myanmar</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#oman">Oman</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#vietnam">Vietnam</a></p> </li> </ul> </li> <li> <p><a href="#region-europe">Europe</a></p> <ul> <li> <p><a href="#europe">Europe</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#france">France</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#ireland">Ireland</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#portugal">Portugal</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#slovakia">Slovakia</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#sweden">Sweden</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#switzerland">Switzerland</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#uk">United Kingdom</a></p> </li> </ul> </li> <li> <p><a href="#region-northamerica">North America</a></p> <ul> <li><a href="#usa">United States</a></li> </ul> </li> <li> <p><a href="#region-oceania">Oceania</a></p> <ul> <li> <p><a href="#australia">Australia</a></p> </li> <li> <p><a href="#newzealand">New Zealand</a></p> </li> </ul> </li> <li> <p><a href="#region-southamerica">South America</a></p> <ul> <li><a href="#argentina">Argentina</a></li> </ul> </li> </ul> <h2 id="resources">Resources</h2> <div id="region-int" class="gh-content"> <h3 id="global"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/region-int">Global</a></h3> <div id="int" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-age">Ageing</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/2025/11/25/event-recap-what-to-expect-from-the-nascent-negotiations-of-an-international-human-rights-treaty-for-older-persons/">What to Expect from the Nascent Negotiations</a> of an International Human Rights Treaty for Older Persons. (2025, Bill of Health)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-climate">Climate Crisis and Environment</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://cbm-global.org/news/one-in-five-is-not-enough">One in Five Is Not Enough: </a> The gains on Disability Inclusion have not gone far enough:</p> <blockquote> <p>“for over 80% of ODA activities in the crucial areas of climate, DRR and gender, either persons with disabilities were not included, or there is no data.” (2025, CBM Global)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-comms">Communication and Language</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/25785273.2025.2573956">Lost without translation:</a> <em>Children of a Lesser God</em> and sign language filmmaking under non-signing control:</p> <blockquote> <p>“This has created a chronic language barrier whereby the vast majority of sign language screen content is written, framed and edited by nonsigners, giving rise to tropes and techniques that perpetuate myths about deaf experience and obscure the semantic meaning of sign language dialogue.” (2025, Transnational Screens)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-cult">Culture, Entertainment and Media</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://souslesroues.ghost.io/la-paraplaylist-1/">The Paraplaylist</a> musicians that have turned their impairment into a signature sound. (In French, 2025, Couper L'herbe Sous les Roues)</p> <p><a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/25785273.2025.2573956">Lost without translation:</a> <em>Children of a Lesser God</em> and sign language filmmaking under non-signing control:</p> <blockquote> <p>“This has created a chronic language barrier whereby the vast majority of sign language screen content is written, framed and edited by nonsigners, giving rise to tropes and techniques that perpetuate myths about deaf experience and obscure the semantic meaning of sign language dialogue.” (2025, Transnational Screens)</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://reelabilities.org/dis-and-that/11-10-films-that-do-disability-humor-right-and-a-lesson-we-can-learn-from-each-of-them">10 Films That Do Disability Humor Right</a> (And a Lesson We Can Learn from Each of Them). (2025, ReelAbilities Film Festival)</p> <p><a href="https://tiltingthelens.com/about-us/reports/adaptive-fashion/">Co-designing adaptive fashion with the Disabled community.</a> Value generation through better practices:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Despite growing awareness, Disabled people have historically been overlooked by the fashion industry, where assumptions about disability and an inherent ableism also persist. Moreover, the Disabled community distrusts and is frustrated with the industry due to persistent issues that remain unaddressed. Disabled customers struggle to access products in physical stores and online. Product offerings are very limited and advertising practices are often poor. Disabled people are often valued by the industry only as customers, with inaccessible education systems and employment opportunities further limiting their potential as designers, experts, creatives, or colleagues. This means with missed opportunities for value creation and market capture, it fails to develop trust and creates a power dynamic that is often extractive.” (2025, Tilting the Lens)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-data">Data and Research</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/research/centres/international-centre-evidence-disability/news/475611/celebrating-15-years-iced">Celebrating 15 years </a> of the International Centre for Evidence in Disability (ICED) at LSHTM. Tom Shakespeare shares his unanswered questions:</p> <blockquote> <p>“I would love to find out more about how people live with pain; I have a hunch that many families affected by disability spend money on medical interventions which do not work; I want to find out whether individuals with disabilities are isolated or connected. Both words and numbers might help us answer those questions. There is much more that needs to be done in the next 15 years.” (2025, ICED)</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://isrf.org/blog/why-is-there-so-much-research-about-us-without-us">Why Is There So Much Research About Us Without Us?</a> Focussing on neurodivergence. (2025, Independent Social Research Foundation)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-digital">Digital Accessibility and Technology</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://blog.google/products/android/accessibility-update-expanded-dark-theme-gemini-talkback/">Android accessibility updates </a> include dark theme’s expanded option, Gemini in TalkBack and more. (2025, Google)</p> <p><a href="https://blogs.microsoft.com/accessibility/forrester-research-2025/">As technology has evolved, so has the need for accessibility.</a> “More than 70% of the U.S. population now stands to benefit from accessible technology, regardless of disability status.” (2025, Microsoft)</p> <p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmFPWxjmnqE">I'm not Remarkable</a> accessibility awareness video. (2025, Apple)</p> <p><a href="https://www.polygon.com/ps5-xbox-series-x-accessibility-disability-community/">The PS5 and Series X era promised inclusion,</a> but the reality is more complicated:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Despite a great deal of forward progress in the accessibility movement, the industry continues to disappoint and hurt the disability community in a variety of ways.” (2025, Polygon)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-drr">Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.internationaldisabilityalliance.org/sites/default/files/pped_policy_brief_tgdrrca_final.pdf">Towards an international Convention</a> on the Protection of Persons in the Event of Disasters (PPED) that protects the rights of persons with disabilities. (2025, IDA)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10198-025-01851-x">Estimating the magnitude and scope of disability-related direct costs:</a> a systematised review. (2025, The European Journal of Health Economics)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-employ">Employment, Business and Work</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.purplespace.org/learning-resources">Building Inner Confidence:</a> an online course “to develop the inner confidence of every disabled employee so that we all feel able to share aspects of our story and to request the adjustments or accommodations we need to thrive.” (2025, Purple Space)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-health">Health</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.upress.umn.edu/9781517917685/the-double-bind-of-disability/">The Double Bind of Disability.</a> A book on How Medical Technology Shapes Bodily Authority:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Rebecca Monteleone shows how medical technologies contribute to a cruel double bind, forcing disabled people to be accountable for adapting to a world built by and for nondisabled people while dismissing their lived experiences in favor of medical expertise. Far more complex than simple progress, these technologies are more oppressive than liberating when they place the burden of care on individuals and perpetuate societal ableism that demands that bodies look, move, and function in certain ways.” (2025, University of Minnesota Press)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-history">History and Memorial</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://archivum.org/news/executive-board-records-of-fimitic-now-open-for-research">Executive Board Records of FIMITIC Now Open for Research.</a> “FIMITIC was founded in 1953 as an international federation of organizations founded by and advocating for persons with physical disability.” (2025, Archivum)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-hum">Humanitarian, Migrants and Refugees</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/23322705.2024.2430894">The Intersection of Human Trafficking and Disabilities.</a> A collection of articles. (2025, Journal of Human Trafficking)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-indep">Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2025/11/20/from-unpaid-care-to-shared-prosperity-investing-in-disability-inclusion-to-unlock-growth">From Unpaid Care to Shared Prosperity:</a> Investing in Disability Inclusion to Unlock Growth.</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-intcoop">International Cooperation</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://inclusivefutures.org/what-we-do/this-is-what-disability-inclusion-looks-like/">This is what disability inclusion looks like.</a> Results from the Inclusive Futures programme. (2025, Inclusive Futures)</p> <p><a href="https://www.impelconsultancy.org/gpi">Applying Global Public Investment and Circular Cooperation</a> to funding for disability rights and inclusion: a discussion. “Awareness of disability and inclusion is growing, but funding is not keeping pace”. (2025, Impel)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.internationaldisabilityalliance.org/content/ida%E2%80%99s-compilations-crpd-committee%E2%80%99s-concluding-observations-adding-recommendations-issued">Compilations of CRPD Committee’s Concluding Observations </a> adding recommendations issued during the recent 33rd session | International Disability Alliance (2025, IDA)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> </div> <div id="region-africa" class="gh-content"> <h3 id="africa"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/region-africa">Africa</a></h3> <div id="africa" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="africa"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-africa">Africa</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-sport">Sport and Paralympics</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://continent.substack.com/p/photo-essay-resounding-victory">Photo essay: Resounding victory.</a> South Sudan become champions of African Blind Football Championship Division Two. (2025, The Continent) See also on <a href="https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20251030-south-sudan-s-blind-football-team-dreams-of-paralympic-glory">France24</a>.</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="burkina" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="burkina-faso"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-burkina">Burkina Faso</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-educ">Education and Childhood</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2025/10/31/burkina-faso-improving-education-of-children-with-disabilities">Burkina Faso Improving Education of Children with Disabilities.</a> Over 19,000 children with disabilities were enrolled into school under the project. (2025, World Bank Group)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="kenya" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="kenya"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-kenya">Kenya</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://minorityafrica.org/he-hoped-a-national-id-would-open-doors-his-missing-fingerprints-kept-them-closed/">He hoped a national ID would open doors.</a> “For 62 years, Ben Mukur Taboi waited for a document every Kenyan is supposed to get at 18. But a lifetime of crawling had erased his fingerprints, and the system had no way to account for him.” (2025, Minority Africa)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="nigeria" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="nigeria"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-nigeria">Nigeria</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-civil">Civil Society and Community</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://inklusion-leben.org/en/how-awwdi-is-empowering-women-with-disabilities-to-lead-change-2/">'We started small, but we are loud':</a> How AWWDI is Empowering Women with Disabilities to Lead Change. (2025, Inklusion leben)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-lived">Lived Experience and Opinion</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://minorityafrica.org/the-words-did-not-come-out-nigerians-who-stutter-navigate-work-in-speech-centric-professions/">“The words did not come out”:</a> Nigerians who stutter navigate work in ‘speech centric’ professions. (2025, Minority Africa)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="uganda" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="uganda"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uganda">Uganda</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-data">Data and Research</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://sjdr.se/articles/10.16993/sjdr.1307">Youth and Mentor Experiences</a> of a Disability Inclusive Youth Research Training and Mentorship Programme in Uganda. (2025, Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-health">Health</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://equityhealthj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12939-025-02650-9">Access to eye health services</a> among older people with disabilities in Karamoja, Uganda: a qualitative exploration of successful care seeking. (2025, International Journal for Equity in Health)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="zambia" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="zambia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-zambia">Zambia</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-covid">COVID-19</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://equityhealthj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12939-025-02656-3">Disability inclusion in Zambia’s government COVID-19 policies:</a> a framework analysis: “These findings underscore persistent structural barriers to equity for people with disabilities during public health crises”. (2025, International Journal for Equity in Health)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> </div> <div id="region-asia" class="gh-content"> <h3 id="asia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/region-asia">Asia</a></h3> <div id="bangladesh" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="bangladesh"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-bangladesh">Bangladesh</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-hum">Humanitarian, Migrants and Refugees</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://disabilityinclusionresourcehub.com/en">Disability Inclusion Resource Hub</a> supporting disability inclusion initiatives supporting the Rohingya population. (2025, Disability Inclusion Resource Hub)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="india" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="india"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-india">India</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-data">Data and Research</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/intljofdissocjus.5.2.0005">Neoliberal Affirmations, Local Distinctions:</a> Disability Policies and Praxes in India:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Through analysis of post-independence socioeconomic policies, [this article] illustrates how India’s distinct integration of disability reflects complex intersections of local traditions, colonial legacies, and market reforms.” (2025, International Journal of Disability and Social Justice)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-sport">Sport and Paralympics</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c78z8n3kvnro">India's blind women cricketers</a> chase history at first T20 World Cup. (2025, BBC)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="indonesia" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="indonesia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-indonesia">Indonesia</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://inclusive-policy.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/report-inclusive-social-protection-for-persons-study-ENG.pdf">Inclusive Social Protection</a> for persons with disabilities in Indonesia: a rapid review of evidence. (2025, Center for Inclusive Policy)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="japan" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="japan"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-japan">Japan</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-access">Accessibility and Design</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://global.oup.com/academic/product/disability-publics-9780198935803">Disability Publics:</a> an open access book on making accessibility in modern Japan. (2025, Oxford University Press)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-history">History and Memorial</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://global.oup.com/academic/product/disability-publics-9780198935803">Disability Publics:</a> an open access book on making accessibility in modern Japan. (2025, Oxford University Press)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="myanmar" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="myanmar"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-myanmar">Myanmar</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/documents/thematic-reports/ahrc61crp1-hidden-crisis-disability-rights-post-coup-myanmar-advance">The Hidden Crisis:</a> Disability Rights in Post-Coup Myanmar:</p> <blockquote> <p>“The junta has attacked, tortured and executed persons with disabilities, imprisoned disability rights advocates, and impeded access to medical supplies and assistive devices. Persons with disabilities have become even more isolated and impoverished.” (2025, OHCHR)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="oman" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="oman"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-oman">Oman</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://decree.om/2025/rd20250092/">Royal Decree 92/2025</a> Issuing the Law of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. (2025, Oman)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="vietnam" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="vietnam"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-vietnam">Vietnam</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.ilo.org/publications/building-inclusive-future-social-protection-catalyst-disability-empowerment">Building an inclusive future: </a> Social protection as a catalyst for disability empowerment in Viet Nam:</p> <blockquote> <p>“The country has made significant progress in covering persons with severe and extremely severe disabilities with social protection. Coverage of disability social assistance allowances has more than tripled over the last 15 years, and 1.7 million people now receive such allowances (1.7 per cent of the population), alongside fully subsidised health insurance”. (2025, ILO)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> </div> <div id="region-europe" class="gh-content"> <h3 id="europe"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/region-europe">Europe</a></h3> <div id="europe" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="europe"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-europe">Europe</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-data">Data and Research</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.inclusion.eu/inclusion-indicators-2025-key-findings">Inclusion Indicators 2025:</a> how 33 European countries perform on rights and inclusion of people with intellectual disabilities and their families. (2025, Inclusion Europe)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-gender">Gender Equality and Women with Disabilities</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2025/10/15/how-does-gender-inequality-affect-people-with-disabilities">How does gender inequality</a> affect people with disabilities? (2025, Euronews)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-mobility">Mobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.edf-feph.org/publications/human-rights-report-air-travel">EDF Human Rights Report 2025 - Rights Delayed:</a> Air Travel for Passengers with Disabilities. (2025, EDF)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-politics">Politics and Elections</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.eui.eu/news-hub?id=disability-and-democratic-backsliding-advocacy-and-survival-with-gabor-petri&amp;lang=en-GB">Disability and democratic backsliding: </a> advocacy and survival with Gabor Petri. (2025, European University Institute)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-relation">Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.dw.com/en/forced-sterilization-in-europe-denying-motherhood-rights/video-74956841">Forced sterilization in Europe:</a> Denying motherhood rights, a documentary:</p> <blockquote> <p>“In 12 EU countries, women with disabilities can be sterilized without their consent. Sara Rocha, who has autism, is fighting to ban the practice in Portugal and networking with people across Europe to raise awareness.” (2025, DW)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="france" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="france"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-france">France</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-educ">Education and Childhood</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.francebleu.fr/infos/societe/les-enfants-en-situation-de-handicap-sont-de-plus-en-plus-scolarises-avec-les-autres-eleves-en-milieu-ordinaire-3344070">Children with disabilities are increasingly</a> being educated alongside other students in mainstream settings:</p> <blockquote> <p>“among young people aged 6 to 15 accompanied by an establishment or a medical-social service for disabled children, 92% are in school (+2 points compared to 2010) and two-thirds (64%) are in mainstream settings, compared to 47% at the end of 2010”. (In French, 2025, ici)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="ireland" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="ireland"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-ireland">Ireland</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-relation">Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.rte.ie/news/courts/2025/1117/1544445-marriage-case-courts/">Couple with intellectual disabilities allowed to marry,</a> “despite the objection of a residential care centre which argued that the man lacked capacity to consent.” (2025, RTÉ)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="portugal" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="portugal"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-portugal">Portugal</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2025/11/portugal-robust-implementation-laws-necessary-better-protection-persons">Robust implementation of laws</a> necessary for better protection of persons with albinism, says UN expert. (2025, OHCHR)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="slovakia" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="slovakia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-slovakia">Slovakia</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-indep">Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://sita.sk/minister-tomas-dostal-otvoreny-list-organizacie-varuju-ze-zmeny-v-socialnych-sluzbach-ohrozia-dostojnost-ludi/">Open letter warning about a return to large-capacity institutions.</a> (In Slovak, 2025, Sita)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="sweden" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="sweden"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-sweden">Sweden</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-employ">Employment, Business and Work</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/1314">“Needed and Valuable Instead of Just Being Employed”:</a> Vocational Training, Work and Social Usefulness Regarding People with Intellectual Disability in Sweden, 1945–1989. (2025, Nordic Journal of Educational History)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-history">History and Memorial</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/1314">“Needed and Valuable Instead of Just Being Employed”:</a> Vocational Training, Work and Social Usefulness Regarding People with Intellectual Disability in Sweden, 1945–1989. (2025, Nordic Journal of Educational History)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="switzerland" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="switzerland"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-switzerland">Switzerland</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-educ">Education and Childhood</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/1315">From Segregation to Inclusion:</a> Special Needs Education and the Transformation of the Swiss Welfare State. (2025, Nordic Journal of Educational History)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-history">History and Memorial</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/1315">From Segregation to Inclusion:</a> Special Needs Education and the Transformation of the Swiss Welfare State. (2025, Nordic Journal of Educational History)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-politics">Politics and Elections</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://souslesroues.ghost.io/le-maladroit-de-vote/">Votes for people with intellectual disabilities:</a> rejected by the canton of Vaud. (In French, 2025, Couper L'herbe Sous les Roues)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="uk" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-covid">COVID-19</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.disabilityrightsuk.org/news/uk-covid-19-inquiry-report-details-damning-failure-protect-disabled-people-%E2%80%9Ctoo-little-too-late">UK Covid-19 Inquiry Report </a> Details Damning Failure to Protect Disabled People as “Too Little, Too Late”. (2025, Disability Rights UK)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-civil">Civil Society and Community</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/intljofdissocjus.5.2.0004">“I Just Didn’t Fit into the Way That They Did Church”: </a> Barriers to Access and Participation for Disabled People in UK Churches. (2025, International Journal of Disability and Social Justice)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-cult">Culture, Entertainment and Media</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://metalmagazine.eu/en/post/design-and-disability-where-accessibility-meets-art">Design and Disability.</a> Where accessibility meets art. Review of the exhibit at the V&amp;A South Kensington in London. (2025)</p> <p><a href="https://www.bodybabble.com/p/imagine-an-accessible-nightclub">Imagine an accessible nightclub.</a> Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent people are designing their dream nightlife. (2025, Body Babble)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/disability-benefit-cuts-cause-rise-in-poverty-and-mental-health-issues,-not-employment-rates">Disability benefit cuts </a> cause rise in poverty and mental health issues, not employment rates, shows research. (2025, Benefits and Work)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-educ">Education and Childhood</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://wonkhe.com/blogs/why-is-it-so-difficult-to-make-reasonable-adjustments-when-assessing-disabled-pgrs/">Why is it so difficult to make</a> reasonable adjustments when assessing disabled post graduate researchers?</p> <blockquote> <p>“Cultural beliefs – including that PGR study is “supposed to be difficult”, that overcoming the struggle is part of the achievement of obtaining a doctorate, and that adjustments devalue the doctorate – all contribute to unhelpful attitudes towards disabled PGRs and institutions meeting their legal obligations.” (2025, Wonkhe)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-employ">Employment, Business and Work</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/the-employment-of-disabled-people-2025/the-employment-of-disabled-people-2025">The employment of disabled people 2025:</a> a statistical overview:</p> <blockquote> <p>“There were 5.5 million disabled people in employment in the UK in Q2 2025 and the disability employment rate was 52.8%, compared to 82.5% for non-disabled people. The increasing number of disabled people in employment (between 2013 and 2025) was driven by four main components of change: disability prevalence (60%); disability employment gap (20%); non-disabled employment rate (15%); and increases in the working-age population (5%).” (2025, Department for Work and Pensions)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-health">Health</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/intljofdissocjus.5.2.0001">Introducing “Energy Limiting Conditions”:</a> The Emergence and Evolution of a New Impairment Concept:</p> <blockquote> <p>‘The term “energy impairment” is a substitution for the term “fatigue” that disrupts many of the impairment typologies used in UK social administration.’ (2025, International Journal of Disability and Social Justice )</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://medium.com/@elsalwilliams/diagnosed-but-not-believed-autistic-women-and-the-medical-gaze-709a57470a33">Diagnosed but not believed:</a> Autistic women and the medical gaze. (2025, Elsa Williams)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-history">History and Memorial</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.activityalliance.org.uk/news/10288-disability-history-month-my-80-years-of-change">My 80 years of change</a> Phil Friend, talks openly about his life and experiences at 80 years old:</p> <blockquote> <p>“My education took place in residential boarding schools for disabled children. These were well-meaning places, but nobody would mistake them for the fast track to university. I never sat an exam. Physical education was nonexistent. We did basket weaving and macramé instead. (Two skills I’ve rarely been asked to demonstrate since). Expectations were low, and the outside world felt a long way off.” (2025, Activity Alliance)</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/intljofdissocjus.5.2.0006">Who Owns Our History?</a> Archiving the Disabled People’s Movement:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Using Manchester’s Disabled People’s Archive as a case study, it demonstrates how democratic governance structures and comprehensive accessibility strategies can ensure archives serve disabled communities rather than simply describing them.” (2025, International Journal of Disability and Social Justice)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-mobility">Mobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://accessiblelink.substack.com/p/promises-consultations-and-roadmaps">Promises, Consultations and Roadmaps:</a> Where’s the Accessible Railway? (2025, The Accessible Link)</p> <p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/oct/24/tanni-grey-thompson-disabled-drivers-at-risk-of-missing-out-on-switch-to-electric-cars">Tanni Grey-Thompson says disabled drivers</a> at risk of missing out on switch to electric cars: “inaccessible charging points show government ‘has forgotten about us’”. (2025, the Guardian)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.disabilitywales.org/from-barely-surviving-to-truly-thriving-disabled-peoples-manifesto-2026-2031/">From Barely Surviving to Truly Thriving:</a> Disabled People's Manifesto 2026-2031. (2025, Disability Wales)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-relation">Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.bigissue.com/opinion/disabled-woman-desexualised-lucy-webster/">How it feels to be a disabled woman desexualised by the world.</a> (2025, Big Issue)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> </div> <div id="region-northamerica" class="gh-content"> <h3 id="north-america"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/region-northamerica">North America</a></h3> <div id="usa" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-age">Ageing</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/15/health/older-people-disability.html">Wheelchair? Hearing Aids? Yes.</a> ‘Disabled’? No Way. “Many older Americans shun an identity that could bring helpful accommodations, improve care and provide community.” (2025, New York Times)</p> <p><a href="https://ihpi.umich.edu/news-events/news/experiences-disability-after-50-poll-looks-self-identity-and-help-health-care">Experiences of disability after 50:</a> Poll looks at self-identity and help with health care visits:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Now, a new poll finds that — even if they have conditions covered by the ADA — many older adults may not think of themselves as disabled or identify as a person with disability. It also finds that most with these conditions do not ask for assistance or accommodations when they get health care.” (2025, University of Michigan)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-at">Assistive Technology</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2025/nov/08/off-road-wheelchair-trackchair-hiking">‘Everyone said it was impossible’:</a> disabled hikers find freedom through off-road wheelchairs. (2025, the Guardian)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-blm">Black Lives Matter and Racial justice</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://crdjustice.medium.com/when-a-call-for-help-becomes-lethal-the-case-of-sonya-massey-and-the-criminalization-of-disability-e64e39569d68">When a Call for Help Becomes Lethal: </a> The Case of Sonya Massey and the Criminalization of Disability. (2025, Center for Racial and Disability Justice)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-covid">COVID-19</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://thesicktimes.org/2025/11/28/you-know-someone-with-long-covid-they-need-you-to-ask-about-it-genuinely/">You know someone with Long COVID.</a> They need you to ask about it genuinely. (2025, The Sick Times)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-comms">Communication and Language</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://theasldictionary.com/">ASL dictionary </a> a monolingual edition. (2025, ASL Dictionary)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-educ">Education and Childhood</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.the74million.org/article/weakening-the-idea-threatens-millions-of-disabled-americans-like-me/">Weakening the IDEA</a> Threatens Millions of Disabled Americans Like Me. (2025, The 74)</p> <p><a href="https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2025/11/this-disability-education-law-turned-50-today-disability-advocates-want-more/">This Disability Education Law Just Turned 50. </a> Disability Advocates Want More. (2025, Mother Jones)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-history">History and Memorial</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://19thnews.org/2025/12/rosa-parks-influence-disability-rights-movement/">How Rosa Parks played a role</a> in influencing the disability rights movement. “Decades after the Montgomery Bus Boycott, these activists in Chicago turned to Parks’ playbook to broaden disability access.” (2025, The 19th)</p> <p><a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/12/us/fernald-state-school-disabled-people.html">He Died at a School for Disabled People.</a> Decades Later, His Brother Sought Answers. (2025, New York Times)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-indep">Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://heller.brandeis.edu/community-living-policy/clec/research/publications/pdfs/systemic-barriers-to-community-living-for-people-of-color-in-institutional-settings.pdf">Systemic Barriers to Community Living </a> Experienced by People of Color in Institutional Settings:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Themes included: 1) unmet health and disability needs, 2) economic and housing barriers, 3) significant administrative burden and complex organizational processes, 4) inadequate case management/social work support for community living, 5) insufficient informational support and peer guides to complete transitions, and 6) discrimination based on race and disability status (racism/ableism).” (2025, Brandeis)</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/12/us/fernald-state-school-disabled-people.html">He Died at a School for Disabled People.</a> Decades Later, His Brother Sought Answers. (2025, New York Times)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-justice">Justice Systems and Legal Capacity</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.npr.org/2025/11/01/nx-s1-5582617/cognitive-disabilities-diversion">How one legal team</a> is building support for people with cognitive disabilities. (2025, NPR)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://andrewolivernyc.substack.com/p/seven-trends-threatening-people-with">Seven Trends Threatening People With Disabilities.</a> (2025, Andrew Oliver)</p> <p><a href="https://michiganlawreview.org/journal/third-party-accommodations/">Third-Party Accommodations:</a></p> <blockquote> <p>“The reasonable accommodations doctrine does not traditionally extend to third parties’ behaviors or choices. I argue that such a narrow vision of reasonable accommodations stems from improperly imposing a traditional privity paradigm, where the first party is the disabled individual, and the second party is the employer or owner of a private or public entity covered by the ADA. This approach disregards how third parties’ actions and choices can significantly affect access for others.” (2025, Michigan Law Review)</p> </blockquote> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-sport">Sport and Paralympics</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2025/nov/08/off-road-wheelchair-trackchair-hiking">‘Everyone said it was impossible’:</a> disabled hikers find freedom through off-road wheelchairs. (2025, the Guardian)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> </div> <div id="region-oceania" class="gh-content"> <h3 id="oceania"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/region-oceania">Oceania</a></h3> <div id="australia" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="australia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-australia">Australia</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-cult">Culture, Entertainment and Media</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://artsreview.com.au/new-national-arts-network-launches-with-opportunities-for-artists-with-disability/">New national arts network</a> launches with opportunities for artists with disability. (2025, Australian Arts Review)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-digital">Digital Accessibility and Technology</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/dec/07/im-15-years-old-and-have-a-disability-social-media-has-been-a-lifeline-why-is-the-government-kicking-me-off">I’m 15 years old and have a disability. </a> Social media has been a lifeline – why is the government kicking me off? (2025, the Guardian)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-drr">Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212420925007514">Disability leadership</a> and the future of inclusive disaster risk reduction. (2025, International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-justice">Justice Systems and Legal Capacity</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/fraud-and-physical-assault-are-more-likely-to-be-experienced-by-those-with-a-disability/mf3pb011w">Australians with disability are uniquely affected by crime, </a> new survey data suggests. (2025, SBS News)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/Now-is-the-time-to-get-disability-human-rights-into-Australian-anti-discrimination-law">Now is the time to get disability human rights</a> into Australian anti-discrimination law. (2025, Pursuit)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="newzealand" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="new-zealand"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-newzealand">New Zealand</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-employ">Employment, Business and Work</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://itbrief.co.nz/story/new-digital-platform-aims-to-bridge-skills-gap-with-inclusion">New digital platform </a> “to help New Zealand businesses address workforce shortages by supporting greater participation of disabled people in sectors facing acute skills gaps, particularly manufacturing, engineering and logistics.” (2025, ITBrief) See also on <a href="https://www.thepost.co.nz/business/360880719/push-fill-worker-shortages-harnessing-disabled-and-neurodiverse-talent">the Post</a>.</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-indep">Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://thespinoff.co.nz/society/10-11-2025/lest-we-forget-one-single-day-to-remember-new-zealands-horrific-abuse-in-care">Lest we forget:</a> One single day to remember New Zealand’s horrific abuse in care. (2025, The Spinoff)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://thedlist.co.nz/newsfeed/aotearoas-role-in-forming-the-uncrdp/">Aotearoa's role in forming the UNCRDP.</a> Interview with Robyn Hunt, from negotiating the CRPD to today. (2025, The D*List)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> </div> <div id="region-southamerica" class="gh-content"> <h3 id="south-america"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/region-southamerica">South America</a></h3> <div id="argentina" class="gh-content"> <h4 id="argentina"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-argentina">Argentina</a></h4> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/javier-milei-mental-health-crisis-argentina-austerity-economics-cuts/">In Milei’s Argentina, austerity economics </a> manifests as a mental health crisis. “Drastic cuts to mental health budget and benefits are worsening Argentina’s already fragile emotional well-being”. (2025, Open Democracy)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-indep">Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://acij.org.ar/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Manicomios-portenos.-La-transformacion-que-no-llega.-ACIJ-y-CELS.pdf">Buenos Aires mental hospitals:</a> the transformation that never comes. (In Spanish, 2025, ACIJ and CELS)</p> <p><strong>In <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-mental">Mental Health</a></strong>:</p> <p><a href="https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/javier-milei-mental-health-crisis-argentina-austerity-economics-cuts/">In Milei’s Argentina, austerity economics </a> manifests as a mental health crisis. “Drastic cuts to mental health budget and benefits are worsening Argentina’s already fragile emotional well-being”. (2025, Open Democracy)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> </div>

Latest international disability inclusion news across 26 countries

27.01.2026 20:20 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Disability news, January 2026, by subject <p><strong><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/">Library</a> &gt; January 2026</strong></p> <p><em>This page is organized by subject, you can also see links organized by <a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/news-jan2026-countries">country</a>.</em></p> <p>This update has 89 curated links from 26 countries and regions, organized across 38 subjects.</p> <h1 id="contents">Contents</h1> <ul> <li><a href="#access">Accessibility and Design</a></li> <li><a href="#age">Ageing</a></li> <li><a href="#at">Assistive Technology</a></li> <li><a href="#blm">Black Lives Matter and Racial justice</a></li> <li><a href="#covid">COVID-19</a></li> <li><a href="#civil">Civil Society and Community</a></li> <li><a href="#climate">Climate Crisis and Environment</a></li> <li><a href="#comms">Communication and Language</a></li> <li><a href="#cult">Culture, Entertainment and Media</a></li> <li><a href="#data">Data and Research</a></li> <li><a href="#digital">Digital Accessibility and Technology</a></li> <li><a href="#drr">Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response</a></li> <li><a href="#econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></li> <li><a href="#educ">Education and Childhood</a></li> <li><a href="#employ">Employment, Business and Work</a></li> <li><a href="#gender">Gender Equality and Women with Disabilities</a></li> <li><a href="#health">Health</a></li> <li><a href="#history">History and Memorial</a></li> <li><a href="#hum">Humanitarian, Migrants and Refugees</a></li> <li><a href="#indep">Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization</a></li> <li><a href="#intcoop">International Cooperation</a></li> <li><a href="#justice">Justice Systems and Legal Capacity</a></li> <li><a href="#lived">Lived Experience and Opinion</a></li> <li><a href="#mental">Mental Health</a></li> <li><a href="#mobility">Mobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism</a></li> <li><a href="#policy">Policy and Rights</a></li> <li><a href="#politics">Politics and Elections</a></li> <li><a href="#relation">Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights</a></li> <li><a href="#sport">Sport and Paralympics</a></li> </ul> <div id="access" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="accessibility-and-design"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-access">Accessibility and Design</a></h2> <h4 id="japan"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-japan">Japan</a></h4> <p><a href="https://global.oup.com/academic/product/disability-publics-9780198935803">Disability Publics:</a> an open access book on making accessibility in modern Japan. (2025, Oxford University Press)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="age" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="ageing"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-age">Ageing</a></h2> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/2025/11/25/event-recap-what-to-expect-from-the-nascent-negotiations-of-an-international-human-rights-treaty-for-older-persons/">What to Expect from the Nascent Negotiations</a> of an International Human Rights Treaty for Older Persons. (2025, Bill of Health)</p> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/15/health/older-people-disability.html">Wheelchair? Hearing Aids? Yes.</a> ‘Disabled’? No Way. “Many older Americans shun an identity that could bring helpful accommodations, improve care and provide community.” (2025, New York Times)</p> <p><a href="https://ihpi.umich.edu/news-events/news/experiences-disability-after-50-poll-looks-self-identity-and-help-health-care">Experiences of disability after 50:</a> Poll looks at self-identity and help with health care visits:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Now, a new poll finds that — even if they have conditions covered by the ADA — many older adults may not think of themselves as disabled or identify as a person with disability. It also finds that most with these conditions do not ask for assistance or accommodations when they get health care.” (2025, University of Michigan)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="at" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="assistive-technology"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-at">Assistive Technology</a></h2> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2025/nov/08/off-road-wheelchair-trackchair-hiking">‘Everyone said it was impossible’:</a> disabled hikers find freedom through off-road wheelchairs. (2025, the Guardian)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="blm" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="black-lives-matter-and-racial-justice"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-blm">Black Lives Matter and Racial justice</a></h2> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://crdjustice.medium.com/when-a-call-for-help-becomes-lethal-the-case-of-sonya-massey-and-the-criminalization-of-disability-e64e39569d68">When a Call for Help Becomes Lethal: </a> The Case of Sonya Massey and the Criminalization of Disability. (2025, Center for Racial and Disability Justice)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="covid" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="covid-19"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-covid">COVID-19</a></h2> <h3 id="response"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-covidresp">Response</a></h3> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.disabilityrightsuk.org/news/uk-covid-19-inquiry-report-details-damning-failure-protect-disabled-people-%E2%80%9Ctoo-little-too-late">UK Covid-19 Inquiry Report </a> Details Damning Failure to Protect Disabled People as “Too Little, Too Late”. (2025, Disability Rights UK)</p> <h4 id="zambia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-zambia">Zambia</a></h4> <p><a href="https://equityhealthj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12939-025-02656-3">Disability inclusion in Zambia’s government COVID-19 policies:</a> a framework analysis: “These findings underscore persistent structural barriers to equity for people with disabilities during public health crises”. (2025, International Journal for Equity in Health)</p> <h3 id="living-with-covid-19"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-covidliving">Living with COVID-19</a></h3> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://thesicktimes.org/2025/11/28/you-know-someone-with-long-covid-they-need-you-to-ask-about-it-genuinely/">You know someone with Long COVID.</a> They need you to ask about it genuinely. (2025, The Sick Times)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="civil" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="civil-society-and-community"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-civil">Civil Society and Community</a></h2> <h4 id="nigeria"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-nigeria">Nigeria</a></h4> <p><a href="https://inklusion-leben.org/en/how-awwdi-is-empowering-women-with-disabilities-to-lead-change-2/">'We started small, but we are loud':</a> How AWWDI is Empowering Women with Disabilities to Lead Change. (2025, Inklusion leben)</p> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/intljofdissocjus.5.2.0004">“I Just Didn’t Fit into the Way That They Did Church”: </a> Barriers to Access and Participation for Disabled People in UK Churches. (2025, International Journal of Disability and Social Justice)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="climate" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="climate-crisis-and-environment"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-climate">Climate Crisis and Environment</a></h2> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://cbm-global.org/news/one-in-five-is-not-enough">One in Five Is Not Enough: </a> The gains on Disability Inclusion have not gone far enough:</p> <blockquote> <p>“for over 80% of ODA activities in the crucial areas of climate, DRR and gender, either persons with disabilities were not included, or there is no data.” (2025, CBM Global)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="comms" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="communication-and-language"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-comms">Communication and Language</a></h2> <h3 id="sign-languages"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-sign">Sign Languages</a></h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/25785273.2025.2573956">Lost without translation:</a> <em>Children of a Lesser God</em> and sign language filmmaking under non-signing control:</p> <blockquote> <p>“This has created a chronic language barrier whereby the vast majority of sign language screen content is written, framed and edited by nonsigners, giving rise to tropes and techniques that perpetuate myths about deaf experience and obscure the semantic meaning of sign language dialogue.” (2025, Transnational Screens)</p> </blockquote> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://theasldictionary.com/">ASL dictionary </a> a monolingual edition. (2025, ASL Dictionary)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="cult" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="culture-entertainment-and-media"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-cult">Culture, Entertainment and Media</a></h2> <h3 id="overview">Overview</h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://souslesroues.ghost.io/la-paraplaylist-1/">The Paraplaylist</a> musicians that have turned their impairment into a signature sound. (In French, 2025, Couper L'herbe Sous les Roues)</p> <p><a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/25785273.2025.2573956">Lost without translation:</a> <em>Children of a Lesser God</em> and sign language filmmaking under non-signing control:</p> <blockquote> <p>“This has created a chronic language barrier whereby the vast majority of sign language screen content is written, framed and edited by nonsigners, giving rise to tropes and techniques that perpetuate myths about deaf experience and obscure the semantic meaning of sign language dialogue.” (2025, Transnational Screens)</p> </blockquote> <h4 id="australia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-australia">Australia</a></h4> <p><a href="https://artsreview.com.au/new-national-arts-network-launches-with-opportunities-for-artists-with-disability/">New national arts network</a> launches with opportunities for artists with disability. (2025, Australian Arts Review)</p> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://metalmagazine.eu/en/post/design-and-disability-where-accessibility-meets-art">Design and Disability.</a> Where accessibility meets art. Review of the exhibit at the V&amp;A South Kensington in London. (2025)</p> <p><a href="https://www.bodybabble.com/p/imagine-an-accessible-nightclub">Imagine an accessible nightclub.</a> Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent people are designing their dream nightlife. (2025, Body Babble)</p> <h3 id="tv-and-film"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-culttvfilm">TV and Film</a></h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://reelabilities.org/dis-and-that/11-10-films-that-do-disability-humor-right-and-a-lesson-we-can-learn-from-each-of-them">10 Films That Do Disability Humor Right</a> (And a Lesson We Can Learn from Each of Them). (2025, ReelAbilities Film Festival)</p> <h3 id="clothing-and-fashion"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-cultclothes">Clothing and Fashion</a></h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://tiltingthelens.com/about-us/reports/adaptive-fashion/">Co-designing adaptive fashion with the Disabled community.</a> Value generation through better practices:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Despite growing awareness, Disabled people have historically been overlooked by the fashion industry, where assumptions about disability and an inherent ableism also persist. Moreover, the Disabled community distrusts and is frustrated with the industry due to persistent issues that remain unaddressed. Disabled customers struggle to access products in physical stores and online. Product offerings are very limited and advertising practices are often poor. Disabled people are often valued by the industry only as customers, with inaccessible education systems and employment opportunities further limiting their potential as designers, experts, creatives, or colleagues. This means with missed opportunities for value creation and market capture, it fails to develop trust and creates a power dynamic that is often extractive.” (2025, Tilting the Lens)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="data" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="data-and-research"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-data">Data and Research</a></h2> <h3 id="overview">Overview</h3> <h4 id="europe"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-europe">Europe</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.inclusion.eu/inclusion-indicators-2025-key-findings">Inclusion Indicators 2025:</a> how 33 European countries perform on rights and inclusion of people with intellectual disabilities and their families. (2025, Inclusion Europe)</p> <h3 id="research"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-research">Research</a></h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/research/centres/international-centre-evidence-disability/news/475611/celebrating-15-years-iced">Celebrating 15 years </a> of the International Centre for Evidence in Disability (ICED) at LSHTM. Tom Shakespeare shares his unanswered questions:</p> <blockquote> <p>“I would love to find out more about how people live with pain; I have a hunch that many families affected by disability spend money on medical interventions which do not work; I want to find out whether individuals with disabilities are isolated or connected. Both words and numbers might help us answer those questions. There is much more that needs to be done in the next 15 years.” (2025, ICED)</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://isrf.org/blog/why-is-there-so-much-research-about-us-without-us">Why Is There So Much Research About Us Without Us?</a> Focussing on neurodivergence. (2025, Independent Social Research Foundation)</p> <h4 id="india"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-india">India</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/intljofdissocjus.5.2.0005">Neoliberal Affirmations, Local Distinctions:</a> Disability Policies and Praxes in India:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Through analysis of post-independence socioeconomic policies, [this article] illustrates how India’s distinct integration of disability reflects complex intersections of local traditions, colonial legacies, and market reforms.” (2025, International Journal of Disability and Social Justice)</p> </blockquote> <h4 id="uganda"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uganda">Uganda</a></h4> <p><a href="https://sjdr.se/articles/10.16993/sjdr.1307">Youth and Mentor Experiences</a> of a Disability Inclusive Youth Research Training and Mentorship Programme in Uganda. (2025, Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="digital" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="digital-accessibility-and-technology"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-digital">Digital Accessibility and Technology</a></h2> <h3 id="overview">Overview</h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://blog.google/products/android/accessibility-update-expanded-dark-theme-gemini-talkback/">Android accessibility updates </a> include dark theme’s expanded option, Gemini in TalkBack and more. (2025, Google)</p> <p><a href="https://blogs.microsoft.com/accessibility/forrester-research-2025/">As technology has evolved, so has the need for accessibility.</a> “More than 70% of the U.S. population now stands to benefit from accessible technology, regardless of disability status.” (2025, Microsoft)</p> <p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmFPWxjmnqE">I'm not Remarkable</a> accessibility awareness video. (2025, Apple)</p> <p><a href="https://www.polygon.com/ps5-xbox-series-x-accessibility-disability-community/">The PS5 and Series X era promised inclusion,</a> but the reality is more complicated:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Despite a great deal of forward progress in the accessibility movement, the industry continues to disappoint and hurt the disability community in a variety of ways.” (2025, Polygon)</p> </blockquote> <h3 id="social-media"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-digitalsoc">Social Media</a></h3> <h4 id="australia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-australia">Australia</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/dec/07/im-15-years-old-and-have-a-disability-social-media-has-been-a-lifeline-why-is-the-government-kicking-me-off">I’m 15 years old and have a disability. </a> Social media has been a lifeline – why is the government kicking me off? (2025, the Guardian)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="drr" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="disaster-risk-reduction-and-crisis-response"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-drr">Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Response</a></h2> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.internationaldisabilityalliance.org/sites/default/files/pped_policy_brief_tgdrrca_final.pdf">Towards an international Convention</a> on the Protection of Persons in the Event of Disasters (PPED) that protects the rights of persons with disabilities. (2025, IDA)</p> <h4 id="australia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-australia">Australia</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212420925007514">Disability leadership</a> and the future of inclusive disaster risk reduction. (2025, International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="econ" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="economics-and-social-protection"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-econ">Economics and Social Protection</a></h2> <h3 id="overview">Overview</h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10198-025-01851-x">Estimating the magnitude and scope of disability-related direct costs:</a> a systematised review. (2025, The European Journal of Health Economics)</p> <h3 id="social-protection"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-socpro">Social Protection</a></h3> <h4 id="argentina"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-argentina">Argentina</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/javier-milei-mental-health-crisis-argentina-austerity-economics-cuts/">In Milei’s Argentina, austerity economics </a> manifests as a mental health crisis. “Drastic cuts to mental health budget and benefits are worsening Argentina’s already fragile emotional well-being”. (2025, Open Democracy)</p> <h4 id="indonesia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-indonesia">Indonesia</a></h4> <p><a href="https://inclusive-policy.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/report-inclusive-social-protection-for-persons-study-ENG.pdf">Inclusive Social Protection</a> for persons with disabilities in Indonesia: a rapid review of evidence. (2025, Center for Inclusive Policy)</p> <h4 id="kenya"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-kenya">Kenya</a></h4> <p><a href="https://minorityafrica.org/he-hoped-a-national-id-would-open-doors-his-missing-fingerprints-kept-them-closed/">He hoped a national ID would open doors.</a> “For 62 years, Ben Mukur Taboi waited for a document every Kenyan is supposed to get at 18. But a lifetime of crawling had erased his fingerprints, and the system had no way to account for him.” (2025, Minority Africa)</p> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/disability-benefit-cuts-cause-rise-in-poverty-and-mental-health-issues,-not-employment-rates">Disability benefit cuts </a> cause rise in poverty and mental health issues, not employment rates, shows research. (2025, Benefits and Work)</p> <h4 id="vietnam"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-vietnam">Vietnam</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.ilo.org/publications/building-inclusive-future-social-protection-catalyst-disability-empowerment">Building an inclusive future: </a> Social protection as a catalyst for disability empowerment in Viet Nam:</p> <blockquote> <p>“The country has made significant progress in covering persons with severe and extremely severe disabilities with social protection. Coverage of disability social assistance allowances has more than tripled over the last 15 years, and 1.7 million people now receive such allowances (1.7 per cent of the population), alongside fully subsidised health insurance”. (2025, ILO)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="educ" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="education-and-childhood"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-educ">Education and Childhood</a></h2> <h3 id="overview">Overview</h3> <h4 id="burkina-faso"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-burkina">Burkina Faso</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2025/10/31/burkina-faso-improving-education-of-children-with-disabilities">Burkina Faso Improving Education of Children with Disabilities.</a> Over 19,000 children with disabilities were enrolled into school under the project. (2025, World Bank Group)</p> <h4 id="france"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-france">France</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.francebleu.fr/infos/societe/les-enfants-en-situation-de-handicap-sont-de-plus-en-plus-scolarises-avec-les-autres-eleves-en-milieu-ordinaire-3344070">Children with disabilities are increasingly</a> being educated alongside other students in mainstream settings:</p> <blockquote> <p>“among young people aged 6 to 15 accompanied by an establishment or a medical-social service for disabled children, 92% are in school (+2 points compared to 2010) and two-thirds (64%) are in mainstream settings, compared to 47% at the end of 2010”. (In French, 2025, ici)</p> </blockquote> <h4 id="switzerland"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-switzerland">Switzerland</a></h4> <p><a href="https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/1315">From Segregation to Inclusion:</a> Special Needs Education and the Transformation of the Swiss Welfare State. (2025, Nordic Journal of Educational History)</p> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.the74million.org/article/weakening-the-idea-threatens-millions-of-disabled-americans-like-me/">Weakening the IDEA</a> Threatens Millions of Disabled Americans Like Me. (2025, The 74)</p> <p><a href="https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2025/11/this-disability-education-law-turned-50-today-disability-advocates-want-more/">This Disability Education Law Just Turned 50. </a> Disability Advocates Want More. (2025, Mother Jones)</p> <h3 id="higher-education"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-educhigh">Higher Education</a></h3> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://wonkhe.com/blogs/why-is-it-so-difficult-to-make-reasonable-adjustments-when-assessing-disabled-pgrs/">Why is it so difficult to make</a> reasonable adjustments when assessing disabled post graduate researchers?</p> <blockquote> <p>“Cultural beliefs – including that PGR study is “supposed to be difficult”, that overcoming the struggle is part of the achievement of obtaining a doctorate, and that adjustments devalue the doctorate – all contribute to unhelpful attitudes towards disabled PGRs and institutions meeting their legal obligations.” (2025, Wonkhe)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="employ" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="employment-business-and-work"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-employ">Employment, Business and Work</a></h2> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.purplespace.org/learning-resources">Building Inner Confidence:</a> an online course “to develop the inner confidence of every disabled employee so that we all feel able to share aspects of our story and to request the adjustments or accommodations we need to thrive.” (2025, Purple Space)</p> <h4 id="new-zealand"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-newzealand">New Zealand</a></h4> <p><a href="https://itbrief.co.nz/story/new-digital-platform-aims-to-bridge-skills-gap-with-inclusion">New digital platform </a> “to help New Zealand businesses address workforce shortages by supporting greater participation of disabled people in sectors facing acute skills gaps, particularly manufacturing, engineering and logistics.” (2025, ITBrief) See also on <a href="https://www.thepost.co.nz/business/360880719/push-fill-worker-shortages-harnessing-disabled-and-neurodiverse-talent">the Post</a>.</p> <h4 id="sweden"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-sweden">Sweden</a></h4> <p><a href="https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/1314">“Needed and Valuable Instead of Just Being Employed”:</a> Vocational Training, Work and Social Usefulness Regarding People with Intellectual Disability in Sweden, 1945–1989. (2025, Nordic Journal of Educational History)</p> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/the-employment-of-disabled-people-2025/the-employment-of-disabled-people-2025">The employment of disabled people 2025:</a> a statistical overview:</p> <blockquote> <p>“There were 5.5 million disabled people in employment in the UK in Q2 2025 and the disability employment rate was 52.8%, compared to 82.5% for non-disabled people. The increasing number of disabled people in employment (between 2013 and 2025) was driven by four main components of change: disability prevalence (60%); disability employment gap (20%); non-disabled employment rate (15%); and increases in the working-age population (5%).” (2025, Department for Work and Pensions)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="gender" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="gender-equality-and-women-with-disabilities"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-gender">Gender Equality and Women with Disabilities</a></h2> <h4 id="europe"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-europe">Europe</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2025/10/15/how-does-gender-inequality-affect-people-with-disabilities">How does gender inequality</a> affect people with disabilities? (2025, Euronews)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="health" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="health"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-health">Health</a></h2> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.upress.umn.edu/9781517917685/the-double-bind-of-disability/">The Double Bind of Disability.</a> A book on How Medical Technology Shapes Bodily Authority:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Rebecca Monteleone shows how medical technologies contribute to a cruel double bind, forcing disabled people to be accountable for adapting to a world built by and for nondisabled people while dismissing their lived experiences in favor of medical expertise. Far more complex than simple progress, these technologies are more oppressive than liberating when they place the burden of care on individuals and perpetuate societal ableism that demands that bodies look, move, and function in certain ways.” (2025, University of Minnesota Press)</p> </blockquote> <h4 id="uganda"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uganda">Uganda</a></h4> <p><a href="https://equityhealthj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12939-025-02650-9">Access to eye health services</a> among older people with disabilities in Karamoja, Uganda: a qualitative exploration of successful care seeking. (2025, International Journal for Equity in Health)</p> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/intljofdissocjus.5.2.0001">Introducing “Energy Limiting Conditions”:</a> The Emergence and Evolution of a New Impairment Concept:</p> <blockquote> <p>‘The term “energy impairment” is a substitution for the term “fatigue” that disrupts many of the impairment typologies used in UK social administration.’ (2025, International Journal of Disability and Social Justice )</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://medium.com/@elsalwilliams/diagnosed-but-not-believed-autistic-women-and-the-medical-gaze-709a57470a33">Diagnosed but not believed:</a> Autistic women and the medical gaze. (2025, Elsa Williams)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="history" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="history-and-memorial"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-history">History and Memorial</a></h2> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://archivum.org/news/executive-board-records-of-fimitic-now-open-for-research">Executive Board Records of FIMITIC Now Open for Research.</a> “FIMITIC was founded in 1953 as an international federation of organizations founded by and advocating for persons with physical disability.” (2025, Archivum)</p> <h4 id="japan"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-japan">Japan</a></h4> <p><a href="https://global.oup.com/academic/product/disability-publics-9780198935803">Disability Publics:</a> an open access book on making accessibility in modern Japan. (2025, Oxford University Press)</p> <h4 id="sweden"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-sweden">Sweden</a></h4> <p><a href="https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/1314">“Needed and Valuable Instead of Just Being Employed”:</a> Vocational Training, Work and Social Usefulness Regarding People with Intellectual Disability in Sweden, 1945–1989. (2025, Nordic Journal of Educational History)</p> <h4 id="switzerland"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-switzerland">Switzerland</a></h4> <p><a href="https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/1315">From Segregation to Inclusion:</a> Special Needs Education and the Transformation of the Swiss Welfare State. (2025, Nordic Journal of Educational History)</p> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.activityalliance.org.uk/news/10288-disability-history-month-my-80-years-of-change">My 80 years of change</a> Phil Friend, talks openly about his life and experiences at 80 years old:</p> <blockquote> <p>“My education took place in residential boarding schools for disabled children. These were well-meaning places, but nobody would mistake them for the fast track to university. I never sat an exam. Physical education was nonexistent. We did basket weaving and macramé instead. (Two skills I’ve rarely been asked to demonstrate since). Expectations were low, and the outside world felt a long way off.” (2025, Activity Alliance)</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/intljofdissocjus.5.2.0006">Who Owns Our History?</a> Archiving the Disabled People’s Movement:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Using Manchester’s Disabled People’s Archive as a case study, it demonstrates how democratic governance structures and comprehensive accessibility strategies can ensure archives serve disabled communities rather than simply describing them.” (2025, International Journal of Disability and Social Justice)</p> </blockquote> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://19thnews.org/2025/12/rosa-parks-influence-disability-rights-movement/">How Rosa Parks played a role</a> in influencing the disability rights movement. “Decades after the Montgomery Bus Boycott, these activists in Chicago turned to Parks’ playbook to broaden disability access.” (2025, The 19th)</p> <p><a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/12/us/fernald-state-school-disabled-people.html">He Died at a School for Disabled People.</a> Decades Later, His Brother Sought Answers. (2025, New York Times)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="hum" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="humanitarian-migrants-and-refugees"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-hum">Humanitarian, Migrants and Refugees</a></h2> <h3 id="overview">Overview</h3> <h4 id="bangladesh"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-bangladesh">Bangladesh</a></h4> <p><a href="https://disabilityinclusionresourcehub.com/en">Disability Inclusion Resource Hub</a> supporting disability inclusion initiatives supporting the Rohingya population. (2025, Disability Inclusion Resource Hub)</p> <h3 id="migration"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-migration">Migration</a></h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/23322705.2024.2430894">The Intersection of Human Trafficking and Disabilities.</a> A collection of articles. (2025, Journal of Human Trafficking)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="indep" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="independent-living-and-deinstitutionalization"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-indep">Independent Living and Deinstitutionalization</a></h2> <h3 id="overview">Overview</h3> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2025/11/20/from-unpaid-care-to-shared-prosperity-investing-in-disability-inclusion-to-unlock-growth">From Unpaid Care to Shared Prosperity:</a> Investing in Disability Inclusion to Unlock Growth.</p> <h4 id="slovakia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-slovakia">Slovakia</a></h4> <p><a href="https://sita.sk/minister-tomas-dostal-otvoreny-list-organizacie-varuju-ze-zmeny-v-socialnych-sluzbach-ohrozia-dostojnost-ludi/">Open letter warning about a return to large-capacity institutions.</a> (In Slovak, 2025, Sita)</p> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://heller.brandeis.edu/community-living-policy/clec/research/publications/pdfs/systemic-barriers-to-community-living-for-people-of-color-in-institutional-settings.pdf">Systemic Barriers to Community Living </a> Experienced by People of Color in Institutional Settings:</p> <blockquote> <p>“Themes included: 1) unmet health and disability needs, 2) economic and housing barriers, 3) significant administrative burden and complex organizational processes, 4) inadequate case management/social work support for community living, 5) insufficient informational support and peer guides to complete transitions, and 6) discrimination based on race and disability status (racism/ableism).” (2025, Brandeis)</p> </blockquote> <h3 id="conditions-in-institutions"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-inst">Conditions in Institutions</a></h3> <h4 id="argentina"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-argentina">Argentina</a></h4> <p><a href="https://acij.org.ar/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Manicomios-portenos.-La-transformacion-que-no-llega.-ACIJ-y-CELS.pdf">Buenos Aires mental hospitals:</a> the transformation that never comes. (In Spanish, 2025, ACIJ and CELS)</p> <h4 id="new-zealand"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-newzealand">New Zealand</a></h4> <p><a href="https://thespinoff.co.nz/society/10-11-2025/lest-we-forget-one-single-day-to-remember-new-zealands-horrific-abuse-in-care">Lest we forget:</a> One single day to remember New Zealand’s horrific abuse in care. (2025, The Spinoff)</p> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/12/us/fernald-state-school-disabled-people.html">He Died at a School for Disabled People.</a> Decades Later, His Brother Sought Answers. (2025, New York Times)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="intcoop" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="international-cooperation"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-intcoop">International Cooperation</a></h2> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://inclusivefutures.org/what-we-do/this-is-what-disability-inclusion-looks-like/">This is what disability inclusion looks like.</a> Results from the Inclusive Futures programme. (2025, Inclusive Futures)</p> <p><a href="https://www.impelconsultancy.org/gpi">Applying Global Public Investment and Circular Cooperation</a> to funding for disability rights and inclusion: a discussion. “Awareness of disability and inclusion is growing, but funding is not keeping pace”. (2025, Impel)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="justice" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="justice-systems-and-legal-capacity"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-justice">Justice Systems and Legal Capacity</a></h2> <h4 id="australia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-australia">Australia</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/fraud-and-physical-assault-are-more-likely-to-be-experienced-by-those-with-a-disability/mf3pb011w">Australians with disability are uniquely affected by crime, </a> new survey data suggests. (2025, SBS News)</p> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.npr.org/2025/11/01/nx-s1-5582617/cognitive-disabilities-diversion">How one legal team</a> is building support for people with cognitive disabilities. (2025, NPR)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="lived" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="lived-experience-and-opinion"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-lived">Lived Experience and Opinion</a></h2> <h4 id="nigeria"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-nigeria">Nigeria</a></h4> <p><a href="https://minorityafrica.org/the-words-did-not-come-out-nigerians-who-stutter-navigate-work-in-speech-centric-professions/">“The words did not come out”:</a> Nigerians who stutter navigate work in ‘speech centric’ professions. (2025, Minority Africa)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="mental" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="mental-health"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-mental">Mental Health</a></h2> <h4 id="argentina"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-argentina">Argentina</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/javier-milei-mental-health-crisis-argentina-austerity-economics-cuts/">In Milei’s Argentina, austerity economics </a> manifests as a mental health crisis. “Drastic cuts to mental health budget and benefits are worsening Argentina’s already fragile emotional well-being”. (2025, Open Democracy)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="mobility" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="mobility-travel-transport-and-tourism"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-mobility">Mobility, Travel, Transport and Tourism</a></h2> <h3 id="overview">Overview</h3> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://accessiblelink.substack.com/p/promises-consultations-and-roadmaps">Promises, Consultations and Roadmaps:</a> Where’s the Accessible Railway? (2025, The Accessible Link)</p> <p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/oct/24/tanni-grey-thompson-disabled-drivers-at-risk-of-missing-out-on-switch-to-electric-cars">Tanni Grey-Thompson says disabled drivers</a> at risk of missing out on switch to electric cars: “inaccessible charging points show government ‘has forgotten about us’”. (2025, the Guardian)</p> <h3 id="air-travel"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-air">Air Travel</a></h3> <h4 id="europe"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-europe">Europe</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.edf-feph.org/publications/human-rights-report-air-travel">EDF Human Rights Report 2025 - Rights Delayed:</a> Air Travel for Passengers with Disabilities. (2025, EDF)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="policy" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="policy-and-rights"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-policy">Policy and Rights</a></h2> <h4 id="international-news"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-int">International News</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.internationaldisabilityalliance.org/content/ida%E2%80%99s-compilations-crpd-committee%E2%80%99s-concluding-observations-adding-recommendations-issued">Compilations of CRPD Committee’s Concluding Observations </a> adding recommendations issued during the recent 33rd session | International Disability Alliance (2025, IDA)</p> <h4 id="australia"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-australia">Australia</a></h4> <p><a href="https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/Now-is-the-time-to-get-disability-human-rights-into-Australian-anti-discrimination-law">Now is the time to get disability human rights</a> into Australian anti-discrimination law. (2025, Pursuit)</p> <h4 id="myanmar"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-myanmar">Myanmar</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/documents/thematic-reports/ahrc61crp1-hidden-crisis-disability-rights-post-coup-myanmar-advance">The Hidden Crisis:</a> Disability Rights in Post-Coup Myanmar:</p> <blockquote> <p>“The junta has attacked, tortured and executed persons with disabilities, imprisoned disability rights advocates, and impeded access to medical supplies and assistive devices. Persons with disabilities have become even more isolated and impoverished.” (2025, OHCHR)</p> </blockquote> <h4 id="new-zealand"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-newzealand">New Zealand</a></h4> <p><a href="https://thedlist.co.nz/newsfeed/aotearoas-role-in-forming-the-uncrdp/">Aotearoa's role in forming the UNCRDP.</a> Interview with Robyn Hunt, from negotiating the CRPD to today. (2025, The D*List)</p> <h4 id="oman"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-oman">Oman</a></h4> <p><a href="https://decree.om/2025/rd20250092/">Royal Decree 92/2025</a> Issuing the Law of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. (2025, Oman)</p> <h4 id="portugal"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-portugal">Portugal</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2025/11/portugal-robust-implementation-laws-necessary-better-protection-persons">Robust implementation of laws</a> necessary for better protection of persons with albinism, says UN expert. (2025, OHCHR)</p> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.disabilitywales.org/from-barely-surviving-to-truly-thriving-disabled-peoples-manifesto-2026-2031/">From Barely Surviving to Truly Thriving:</a> Disabled People's Manifesto 2026-2031. (2025, Disability Wales)</p> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://andrewolivernyc.substack.com/p/seven-trends-threatening-people-with">Seven Trends Threatening People With Disabilities.</a> (2025, Andrew Oliver)</p> <p><a href="https://michiganlawreview.org/journal/third-party-accommodations/">Third-Party Accommodations:</a></p> <blockquote> <p>“The reasonable accommodations doctrine does not traditionally extend to third parties’ behaviors or choices. I argue that such a narrow vision of reasonable accommodations stems from improperly imposing a traditional privity paradigm, where the first party is the disabled individual, and the second party is the employer or owner of a private or public entity covered by the ADA. This approach disregards how third parties’ actions and choices can significantly affect access for others.” (2025, Michigan Law Review)</p> </blockquote> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="politics" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="politics-and-elections"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-politics">Politics and Elections</a></h2> <h4 id="europe"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-europe">Europe</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.eui.eu/news-hub?id=disability-and-democratic-backsliding-advocacy-and-survival-with-gabor-petri&amp;lang=en-GB">Disability and democratic backsliding: </a> advocacy and survival with Gabor Petri. (2025, European University Institute)</p> <h4 id="switzerland"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-switzerland">Switzerland</a></h4> <p><a href="https://souslesroues.ghost.io/le-maladroit-de-vote/">Votes for people with intellectual disabilities:</a> rejected by the canton of Vaud. (In French, 2025, Couper L'herbe Sous les Roues)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="relation" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="relationships-sex-and-reproductive-rights"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-relation">Relationships, Sex and Reproductive Rights</a></h2> <h4 id="europe"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-europe">Europe</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.dw.com/en/forced-sterilization-in-europe-denying-motherhood-rights/video-74956841">Forced sterilization in Europe:</a> Denying motherhood rights, a documentary:</p> <blockquote> <p>“In 12 EU countries, women with disabilities can be sterilized without their consent. Sara Rocha, who has autism, is fighting to ban the practice in Portugal and networking with people across Europe to raise awareness.” (2025, DW)</p> </blockquote> <h4 id="ireland"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-ireland">Ireland</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.rte.ie/news/courts/2025/1117/1544445-marriage-case-courts/">Couple with intellectual disabilities allowed to marry,</a> “despite the objection of a residential care centre which argued that the man lacked capacity to consent.” (2025, RTÉ)</p> <h4 id="united-kingdom"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-uk">United Kingdom</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.bigissue.com/opinion/disabled-woman-desexualised-lucy-webster/">How it feels to be a disabled woman desexualised by the world.</a> (2025, Big Issue)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div> <div id="sport" class="gh-content"> <h2 id="sport-and-paralympics"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/topic-sport">Sport and Paralympics</a></h2> <h4 id="africa"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-africa">Africa</a></h4> <p><a href="https://continent.substack.com/p/photo-essay-resounding-victory">Photo essay: Resounding victory.</a> South Sudan become champions of African Blind Football Championship Division Two. (2025, The Continent) See also on <a href="https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20251030-south-sudan-s-blind-football-team-dreams-of-paralympic-glory">France24</a>.</p> <h4 id="india"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-india">India</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c78z8n3kvnro">India's blind women cricketers</a> chase history at first T20 World Cup. (2025, BBC)</p> <h4 id="united-states"><a href="https://www.disabilitydebrief.org/library/country-usa">United States</a></h4> <p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2025/nov/08/off-road-wheelchair-trackchair-hiking">‘Everyone said it was impossible’:</a> disabled hikers find freedom through off-road wheelchairs. (2025, the Guardian)</p> <p><em>Back to <a href="#contents">contents</a>.</em></p> </div>

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