The UN in Geneva questions the UK government on its commitment to disabled people. We speak to two people who followed the proceedings - disability reporter Rachel Charlton-Dailey and Rensa Gaunt from Inclusion London, which campaigns for equality for deaf and disabled people.
Actress and broadcaster Madison Tevlin on challenging assumptions about disabled people - and why having Down’s Syndrome is her least interesting trait.
Plus Don Biswas talks neurodiverse comedy.
The episode was made by Daniel Gordon with Niamh Hughes and Emma Tracey. The editor is Alex Lewis. Recorded and mixed by Dave O’Neill.
To get in touch with the team email accessall@bbc.co..uk or find us on X, @bbcaccessall. Don’t forget to subscribe by finding us on BBC Sounds.
‘I need to remind myself to talk to people’
‘Well Defined Chaos’
The DDA and Me
CripTales: Thunderbox
CripTales: The Real Deal
CripTales: Audition
'I was howling with pain and there was blood everywhere'
‘I couldn’t hear my voice’
There’s Covid On Campus
‘There’s no right way to be a student’
‘I miss the office banter’
'Remember when we were stockpiling toilet roll'
'It is possible to be tired and in pain and happy at the same time'
The schoolgirl who broke her neck and became a racing driver
'Did anyone else miss sex during chemo?'
Shielding Limbo
Maskcast: “If I’m struggling, be kind”
'My house became a bit like rehab’
Alex Brooker: ‘I’m the most comfortable I’ve ever been with my disability’
A&E in lockdown: Scout fractures her arm
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