Contents1 Introduction: Lived experience and policy making 1Jennifer Smith-Merry and Damian Mellifont2 Centring disabled voices: Inclusion of lived experiences inpolicy 8Sze Hwee Jace Tay and Kuansong Victor Zhuang3 Re-imagining policymaking with rural people with disabilityin Australia 18Claire Quilliam, Luke Wakely and Jodie Bailie4 Navigating disability in times of conflict: The case ofdisability policies in Pakistan 32Farman Ali, Zia Ullah Akhunzada and Mandy Lau5 The multi-layered, multi-faceted importance of the livedexperience in disability health policy 44Dinesh Palipana and Gisselle Gallego6 The role of lived experience and the right to participatein the CRPD: The case of disability policymaking intechnocratic Singapore 56Daryl W. J. Yang7 Indonesia's digital disability inclusion: From regulation topolicymaking and practice 69Muhammad Novsyaroni Umar, Galuh Fitri Amalia Susilo andMuhammad Karim Amrullah8 From experience to policy: The influence of livedexperience on disability transport policy in Sydney,Australia 87Miguel Loyola and Jennifer Kent9 What is the problem with private supported boardinghouses? Resident perspectives on the QueenslandParliamentary Inquiry 100Elroy Dearn, Neil Turton-Lane and Matilda Alexander10 The research agenda for assisted dying policy forpsychiatric disability 117Sam Sam and Jennifer Smith-Merry11 Decolonising the Indigenous disability sciences in Australiaand New Zealand 126Jemma Chao, Alix Beckett, Sarah Veli-Gold and John Gilroy12 The good, the bad and the ugly: Accommodations forIndigenous Canadian civil servants with disabilities 145John T. Ward, Kevin P. Morgan, Lexi (Giizhigokwe)Nahwegiizhic and Annie Smith St-Georges13 Radical disability disclosure: How to encourage an invisiblecommunity to engage in disability policymaking 166Téa Rundback14 Co-producing knowledge to inform policy: A disabledperson's reflections on processes, learnings, strengths, andchallenges 175Susan Wadsworth and Rachelle A. Martin.
A Research Agenda for Lived Experience and Disability Policy