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have something to add? add it in a comment, and I will add it to the table!Name:Type of resource:Quick summary:Notes / Quotes / Excerpts:
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Books and articles I'm reading/ have read that are contributing to my work:Cook As You Are by Ruby Tandohbookcook book that's almost as long as a novel, with recipes that take every part of cooking into account: prep time, cook time, heat exposure, clean up time, and so much more.
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Disability Visibility edited by Alice Wong bookshort stories written by different disabled people
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A Disability History of the United States by Kim E. Nielsenbookretells U.S. history and how disabled people and the perception of disability influenced the history
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Reflections on an Opening: Disability Justice and Creating Collective Access in Detroit by Mia Mingusblog postreflection on their experience Creating Collective Access apart of the Allied Media Conference written in 2010"What would access beyond logistics look and feel like? Access that allows people to not just be included, but maintain their dignity and connection to their communities? How do we care for each other in ways that allow us to stay connected to our bodies and stay connected to each other in order to build the kind of world that can care for us all? We are learning and trying and learning and practicing and learning again.
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Introduction to Crip Technoscienceacademic paperfairly brief explanation of crip technoscience, many other related articles linked on this page" "Crip technoscience,” as a recent scholarly analytic (Hamraie, 2015,2017; Hamraie & Fritsch, 2019), names historic and contemporary practices of anti-assimilationist disability making and knowing."
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The Neoliberal Circulation of Affects: Happiness, accessibility and the capacitation of disability as wheelchairacademic paperinterrogates the ISA (International Symbol of Access), and perceptions of what disabled people should look and act like"By designating spaces that are accessible in contrast to inaccessible spaces, the ISA positions disability as something apart from normative embodiment"
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Crip Technoscience Manifestoacademic paper"We seek to bring crip theory and feminist technoscience into closercontact, exploring their generative friction""Disabled people are experts and designers of everyday life. But we also harness technoscience for political action, refusing to comply with demands to cure, fix, or eliminate disability. Attentive to the intersectionalworkings of power and privilege, we agitate against independence and productivity as requirements for existence."
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design with disabled people now created by: Alexa Vaughn-Brainard"a living resource""a living resource for landscape architects, designers, & planners to practice a more inclusive design process & create a more accessible public realm. "website includes multiple toolkits, great starting place for understanding accessibility, disability theory and history.
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Adaptive Design Association Online Resource libraryscroll to find video library with basic cardboard carpentry skills, and building with cardboard manualextensive online resource library about creating with adaptive equipment from cardboardthey are available for presentations
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An Accessibility Manifesto for the Arts by Carmen PapaliaAccessibility Manifesto Includes the Five Tenets of Open Access, and explains Open Access methods and processes through personal experience"Open Access relies on those present, what their needs are and how they can find support with each other and in their communities. It is a perpetual negotiation of trust between those who practice support as a mutual exchange."
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Critical AxisMedia and pop culture critiquecollects and analyzes disability representation in media
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Principles of Universal DesignList of UD principles
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Notes on Temporal Inaccessibility by Alex Haagaard Medium articletalks about inaccessibility in regards to time, rather than focusing on space
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Skin, Tooth and Bone by Sins InvalidDisability Justice PrimerEssential Reading! Contains Disability Justice Principles, history, and information about making spaces more accessibileSins Invalid. (2019). Skin, Tooth, and Bone: The Basis of Movement is Our People (2nd ed.). [Digital version]. Retrieved from sinsinvalid.org.
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Laziness Does Not Exist by Devon PriceBookon my "up next to read" list"Laziness Does Not Exist explores the psychological underpinnings of the “laziness lie,” including its origins from the Puritans and how it has continued to proliferate as digital work tools have blurred the boundaries between work and life. Using in-depth research, Price explains that people today do far more work than nearly any other humans in history yet most of us often still feel we are not doing enough."
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Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good by adrienne maree brown Bookon my "up next to read" list"How do we make social justice the most pleasurable human experience? How can we awaken within ourselves desires that make it impossible to settle for anything less than a fulfilling life? Author and editor adrienne maree brown finds the answer in something she calls “pleasure activism,” a politics of healing and happiness that explodes the dour myth that changing the world is just another form of work. Drawing on the black feminist tradition, she challenges us to rethink the ground rules of activism. Her mindset-altering essays are interwoven with conversations and insights from other feminist thinkers, including Audre Lorde, Joan Morgan, Cara Page, Sonya Renee Taylor, and Alexis Pauline Gumbs. Together they cover a wide array of subjects—from sex work to climate change, from race and gender to sex and drugs—building new narratives about how politics can feel good and how what feels good always has a complex politics of its own
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Resources:Disability Lead FellowshipFellowship"Our Fellows range from community activists and artists to entrepreneurs and corporate employees in the Chicago region who are eager to explore their disability identity and how to lead with power and influence."
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the CHAAD project"creating an accountable hospitality culture that empowers pleasurable and sustainable lives for workerrs by providing ffimative and equitable resources"
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ROC Unitednon profit for restaurant workers, by restuarant workers
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A Brief Disability Accessibility Guide by Haben Girma
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WebAIM Alt Text techniques
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Princeton Alt Text guidelines
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Creaky Jointscomplete much needed research projects and surveys about their community, and people's experiences" "Community of people living with arthritis & rheumatoid disease, bringing arthritis to its knees since 1999"
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Learning From:@disabledmeals on instagrammutual aid project"disabled people sharing meals, pro plastic, pro sharing meals"
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@disabledhacks on instagrammutual aid projecta place to "submit/request hacks"
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@crutches_and_spice, Imani Barbarinon tikTok, Patreon, and instagram
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Black Disability Collective@BlackDisability on twitter, @blackdisabilitycollective on instagram, and facebook group"Sharing our stories and envisioning our future. Black disabled lives are sacred."
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@nina_tame, Nina Tameon instagram and twitter
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@invalid_art, Maryon instagram and twitter
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@itswalela, Walela Nehandaon instagram and twitter
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Tilting the Lens, Sinead Burkeaccessibility consultancy
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Haben Girma
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Pacing PixieInstagram account that creates really helpful and informative graphics about disability and ableism""Disability activism, access, and awesomeness"
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Upgrade Accessibility, created by Mary Fashikinstagram account (they're also on twitter!) that challenges today's accessibility standards
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jen white johnsonInstagram accountJen is a designer and artist
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Watching:Crip CampDocumentary on Netflix
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CODA (2021)Movieon my "to watch" list
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Disrupting Ableism through Artful ActivismRecording of a talk by Lateef McLeod and DJ Savareseconversation hosted by the Hastings Center"While many people think of assistive technology and policy changes as solutions to these inequities, these efforts are not adequate to address the profound cultural stigma that attends disability. this is why people with disabilites must look beyond these approaches to achieving equity and continue to strive seeking subtainial and revolutionary change"
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Twin Cities Local food spots that are good for people with food restricitions!Coconut Whisk Cafecafe located in Loring Park, also sell their baking mixes in Targets around the metro area, and at the Wedgevegan, gluten free cafe, run by an incredible couple! they have bubble tea!they also donate 1 plant based meal for every purchase
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