Outputs
Publications from the Disability Matters team
We are the home to an emerging and help curate .
Below are some of our work:
You can also read some publications from members of our team.
If you would like to access our work in an alternative format, or have questions about our research, please get in touch.
Conferences
Nordic Network on Disability Research (NNDR) conference, 2025
Rhea Halsey, Liz Dew, and Lucy Dunning presented a paper on professional services and disability inclusion at the Nordic Network on Disability Research (NNDR) conference Disability in Local and Global Contexts in early May 2025. Rhea, Liz, and Lucy's paper was adapted and presented at the online symposia in July. Read the script and watch the recording here.
Members of the team reported on the challenges of supporting disability research in the neoliberal academy with reference to a working paper written by Rhea Halsey, Dan Goodley and Rebecca Lawthom
Rhea Halsey and Dan Goodley presented papers on behalf of the Disability Matters programme at the 2nd International Conference on Disability Studies: Disability Matters: Critically Examining Disablism and Ableism: A collaboration between the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Faculty of Education, Department of Primary Education, School of Education, University of Sheffield, and iHuman, University of Sheffield.
Dan Goodley was invited to present as part of a panel on Inclusive Leadership at the EDIS2023 event at the Francis Crick institute in London. Dan joined Hamied Haroon, the Chair of National Association of Disabled Staff Networks, to lobby for the centralisation of disabled people in the conceptualisation and management of research.
Dan Goodley offered a soft international launch of the Disability Matters programme during a session to the Nordic Network of Disability Research which was held in Iceland this year. For many this was a first time to reconnect with critical disability studies scholars post-pandemic. Dan joined other members of the Critical Disability Studies team to present on their research and scholarship. A flyer introducing our work with links to project websites can be found here.
Lectures and talks
The Inclusion Leadership Research Interest Group hosted an event on Thursday 19th June 2025, entitled . The RIGs Co-Convenors, Dr Beth Holmes, Dr Wendy Conrad and Dr Donnie Adams, were joined by guest speaker, Professor Dan Goodley, Professor of Disability Studies and Education in the University of Sheffields School of Education, who discussed his work in the field of Critical Disability Studies, and the ways in which academics, researchers and research professional colleagues are depathologising the disablist and ableist university.
Blogs
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Ankita Mishra's blog post for the examines the everyday negotiations faced by disabled and/or chronically ill women of colour in academia through composite narratives.
Christina Lee explores the concepts and metaphors behind the town hall event and why it is important to centre disability in equity, diversity, and inclusion.
This article offers a provocation challenging Equality, Diversity and Inclusion discourse from a critical disability studies perspective - written by Dan Goodley and Kirsty Liddiard.
Podcasts
, 2025
In this episode, Nicole Redvers and Christina Lee share their experience of resisting hierarchies and creating space for alternative ways of thinking and being in academia.
, 2023
Refers to a series of free, online events where scholars, health professionals, and the public discuss how arts and humanities can inform healthcare. Hosted by The University of Kent and with the support of the Churchill Foundation, these events seek to develop meaningful dialogue and connection between humanities and medicine. Dan Goodley joined colleague Kirsty Liddiard to discuss the ways in which Disability Matter's Scholarship work offers a paradigm shift to disability as driving subject in the medical humanities. A link to the podcast can be found
Seminars
Dan Goodley presented a paper to the
Publications from our team
Titchkosky, T. (forthcoming). Submitted: Fascism taking Flight on a Disability Runway: Analyzing Trumps Disability Degradation in Turbulent Times. Disability in Turbulent Times (Edward Elgar Publishing). Edited by Patty Douglas, Harriet Cameron and Katherine Rusnwick-Cole.
Cagulada, E. (2025). Breathing Speaks of God: Exploring a Moment's Unfolding Through Interpretive Disability Studies (Canadian Theological Society ... ).
Goodley, D., Liddiard, K. and Lawthom, R. (2025). The Depathologising University, Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research, 27(1), p. 120133. Available at: How might we think of university bureacracy and administration as well as researcher support as opportunities to enhance a disability studies agenda in the university?
Goodley, D. (2024). Third Edition. This book references Disability Matters an a Case Study for exploring questions of theory, methodology and research.
Liddiard, K., Atkinson, L., Evans, K., Gibson, B., Goodley, D., Hale, J., Lawson, R., Runswick-Cole, K., Spurr, R., Vogelmann, E., Watts, L., Weiner, K., and Whitney-Mitchell, S. (2024) 'No-ones contribution is more valid than anothers: Committing to inclusive democratic methodologies', Research in Education: Democratic Methodologies in Education Research (Special Issue).
Titchkosky, T. (2024). Interpretive Methods in Disability Studies: Dyslexia Inflected Inquiry. Qualitative Inquiry, 0(0). . explores how disability studies can take shape as an interpretive method and how disability-perception can influence this.
Goodley, D. (2024). Depathologising the university. Pedagogy, Culture & Society, 118. This paper develops a conversation with decolonisation to pitch a novel mode of engagement; depathologising the university. The paper is Gold Open Access and available
Chataika, T. and Goodley, D. (2024). The Routledge Handbook of Postcolonial Disability Studies. London: Routledge, published March 2024). Led, curated and driven by Dr Tsitsi Chataika - with editorial input from Disability Matters's Dan Goodley - this exciting new text challenges the Western, European and North American tendencies of critical disability studies through centring and exploring postcolonial theory. More details can be found
Goodley, D. (2023). Acknowledges Disability Matters as a space in which colleagues are grappling with the pull and push of humanism and posthumanism.
Zhuang, V., Wong, M.E. and Goodley, D. (Editors). (2023). (Eds). Not Without Us: Perspectives on Disability and Inclusion in Singapore. Singapore: Ethos Books. A ground-breaking text that, for the first time, brings together disabled scholars, community organisers and artists to centralise questions of disability in the Singaporean context. Here is a to an online discussion about the book.
iHuman
How we understand being human differs between disciplines and has changed radically over time. We are living in an age marked by rapid growth in knowledge about the human body and brain, and new technologies with the potential to change them.