The term ‘accessibility’ and ‘inclusive design’
Centre for Universal Design Australia (2024)
https://universaldesignaustralia.net.au/design-for-participation-inclusion-will-follow/
Designers can relate to the term “inclusive design” more than other terms. This was one of the findings of a Swedish study. Designers had a general sense of “accessibility”, but they felt intimidated by the term. They thought it was for extreme cases for a few people and something they could ignore.
Designers also thought accessibility was a higher requirement than inclusive design. They felt inclusive design sounded more inviting and positive than accessible or universal design.
This is an important study in 2020 for design educators, advocates for people with disability and older people, and creators of guidelines. Perception is everything – it underpins attitudes and in turn, designs.
Esra Kahraman (2020):
Page 9 an array of useful quotes.
https://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1440881/FULLTEXT01.pdf
http://kth.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A1362526&dswid=3143
Notes:
Add to the introduction information about the definitions and why inclusive design being about awareness of people, but also its a concept better perceived than digital accessibility.
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