Spotlighting Intersectional Changemaking: Researcher Explores Black Disabled Experiences in the UK
Emediong’s project is based on lived experience and grounded in Disability Justice, Black Feminism, and Anti-Racism. The research confronts systemic erasure and reimagines equity through lived experience.
Why This Research Is Essential?
Black Disabled people in the UK face unique barriers at the intersection of racism and ableism—yet their stories are chronically absent from disability advocacy, academic research, and policy-making. This exclusion perpetuates harmful gaps in healthcare, employment, and social support.
Emediong’s work is critical because it:
- Centers Intersectionality: Most disability studies focus on white experiences, while race-focused research often overlooks disability. This project bridges that divide.
- Challenges Invisibility: Non-visible disabilities (e.g., chronic pain, neurodivergence) are already stigmatised; layered with anti-Blackness, these experiences are further marginalised.
- Informs Real-World Change: Findings will equip activists, policymakers, and service providers to address systemic barriers with culturally competent solutions.
- Builds Collective Power: By documenting resistance and resilience, the project fosters solidarity among Black Disabled communities.
- Centres Coproduction: By grounding this research in coproduction, Emediong is at the forefront of coproductive intersectionality research; a rarely explored research method!
Join the Study: Share Your Story
Emediong invites eligible participants to contribute through:
1. One-to-One Interviews
- 1 hour, £30 Amazon voucher.
- Questions co-created with lived-experience peer researchers.
2. Focus Groups (Photo-Elicitation Method)
- Two sessions: Training + discussion.
- Take photos reflecting your experiences, then explore their meaning collectively.
- Compensation provided; equipment available if needed.
Eligibility
- Self-identify as Black British/African/Caribbean/any Black ethnic identity.
- Self-identify as having a non-visible disability (e.g., chronic illness, neurodivergence, energy-limiting condition).
- Live in the UK.
Take Part & Shape the Narrative
Ethically approved by King’s College London.