Woo WHO My Reimagining Disability documentary is a finalist
I am thrilled to announce that “Equal Access: Inclusion for Everyone – Reimagining Disability & together creating an Inclusive Future for all”, one of a series of short documentary films created for Griffith University by Elizabeth Kendall, Ivan Gomez and I, has been chosen, from the many thousands of global entrants, as a finalist in this years International World Health Organisation (WHO) short film festival.
Thanks to all those involved, in front of and behind the camera, including Dinesh Palipana OAM , Dr Claudio Pizzolato, Dr Jessica Paynter, Dr Belinda Beck and Dr Daniel Harvie, 200+ (& growing) incredible Griffith researchers, industry partners, end users, patients, collaborators and a special shout out to the Department Of The Future for their continued creative genius and involvement, as we unite together to banish the label and stigma of “disability” forever!
You can find more information on the WHO website
https://lnkd.in/gT4XtNFm
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Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the Reimagining Disability documentary about?
It documents the intersection of technology, design, and human potential in the disability space — examining how the right tools, systems, and attitudes transform what is possible for people with disability. The documentary takes a foresight lens: what is already possible, what is arriving, and what barriers are institutional rather than technical.
Q: What does a foresight perspective add to the disability inclusion conversation?
It shifts the frame from compliance and accommodation to capability and design. Most organisations approach disability inclusion as a legal obligation. The foresight perspective asks: what becomes possible when we design for the full range of human capability from the start? Universal design thinking benefits everyone — this is one of the clearest examples of how designing for the edge improves the centre.
Q: What are the most significant technology signals for disability in the coming decade?
Brain-computer interfaces for communication and mobility (Neuralink is the prominent name, but there are many serious research programs), exoskeleton technology moving from rehabilitation to everyday use, AI-powered real-time translation for sensory differences (captioning, description, communication augmentation), and the continued maturation of prosthetics. The decade to 2035 will see more change in this space than the previous five decades.
Q: Can Morris Misel speak on disability, inclusion, and future design for our organisation?
Yes. Disability inclusion, universal design, and the futures of human capability are topics he addresses for corporate, government, and association clients. Book at morrismisel.com.
I am thrilled to announce that "Equal Access: Inclusion for Everyone – Reimagining Disability & together creating an Inclusive Future for all", one of a series of short documentary films created forGriffith UniversitybyElizabeth Kendall,Ivan Gomezand I, has been chosen, from the .
When signals like Woo WHO My Reimagining Disability documentary is a emerge, organisations that engage early have the advantage of choosing their response rather than reacting to events. That gap between those who prepared and those who did not is where competitive positioning is actually made or lost.
The most important question is not whether Woo WHO My Reimagining Disability documentary is a will matter, but how quickly it will matter in your specific context. Leaders benefit most from mapping the ripple effects early — not just the direct impact but the second and third-order consequences that arrive later and hit harder. That is the practical work of foresight.