On Crip Time challenges the ableist systems that are "preventing disabled people from accessing the future"
Briefly

Michiel explains how queer autistic individuals find kinship in crip theory and activism, creating a community through gatherings producing 'unruly resistances' that challenge disability narratives.
Kaiya highlights the shift in participants' perspectives, pointing out that many creative practitioners had previously believed design was not a field for them, revealing the depth of ableist influence.
The Risograph publication, designed to reflect the outputs of the programme, serves as a 'dossier of your own', challenging the traditional, impersonal narratives of disability in medical documents.
Michiel elaborates on the publication's design, stating it aims to create a 'mutiny' against top-down narratives enforced by traditional medical perspectives on disability and illness.
Read at Itsnicethat
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