When accessibility, diversity and inclusion are treated as separate from standard practice, their application depends on timing and individual motivation. But once these elements are embedded in everyday workflows — in every step of the policy process and in team reflection — awareness of these themes has continuous space to grow, including among those still developing their perspective.
This marks the difference between policy shaped by assumptions about a presumed norm, and policy that reflects the society we actually are: plural and diverse. That is why this research explores how accessibility, diversity and inclusion can creatively become a structural starting point in the design of new policy.
Designing for Inclusive Policy can be downloaded below. For more design research downloads and publications, visit this page.