CREATE is leading a cross-campus initiative to increase awareness of, and research in, the intersection of race, disability and technology.
In collaboration with six campus partners, CREATE is developing a cross-campus initiative at the intersection of race, disability and technology. The initiative hosted a Winter Quarter 2023 panel discussion at this intersection to encourage new collaborations, and has put out a call for proposals.
Our campus partners in this initiative:
- Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering
- Buerk Center for Entrepreneurship
- Office of the ADA Coordinator
- Office of Minority Affairs and Diversity Race and Equity Initiative
- Population Health Initiative
- Simpson Center for the Humanities
Recent books have interrogated topics such as the intersection of Race and Technology; and Disability Studies and Critical Race Theory. However, there is a need for more research that brings these topics together, particularly projects that deeply engage with this intersection, exploring how race and disability together impact the experiences, outcomes, technology needs, and opportunities available to people of color with disabilities.
Research topics
In Fall 2020, CREATE hosted a seminar on the topic of Race, Disability and Technology and in Spring 2022, CREATE hosted a panel on the topic during CREATE’s Community Day and Research Showcase. Some examples topics came out of those events are listed below:
Biased institutions
People with disabilities are over-represented in police encounters and in the prison system, and technology plays a role in this. From biased algorithms to surveillance technologies used to track people before they are even convicted, there are racial and disability based disparities in the criminal justice system. How do these systems interact? What novel systems and technologies can improve this?
Relevant Readings:
- Chicas Talk Disability 6: Police Interactions with People With Disabilities
- Understanding the policing of black, disabled bodies
Youth
Disability, combined with race, plays a troubling role in many aspects of the school experience. From the “school to prison pipeline” to impacts on higher education access, this intersection is critical to study. How can educational technologies, and technology education, both broaden their remit to address these issues and their intersection?
Relevant Readings:
- A Teenager Didn’t Do Her Online Schoolwork. So a Judge Sent Her to Juvenile Detention
- Crippin’ Jim Crow: Disability, dis-location, and the school-to-prison pipeline” In Disability incarcerated
AI & fairness
How do ableism and race interact to impact AI ableism and biases? In what contexts is AI applied where these concerns intersect? How can innovations in algorithms and data address this? For example, speech recognition and speech based device control can be problematic from both a race and a disability perspective, failing to recognize accents of all sorts, as well as dialects.
Relevant readings:
- Disability, Bias and AI
- Talking with Tech AAC Podcast: Kevin Williams & Lateef McLeod: Black AAC Usmer Perspectives on Racism and Disability. YouTube at Timestamp | Transcription
- Designing for intersectional, interdependent accessibility
Healthcare
How do both race and disability combine to impact ML based healthcare? How can we change health technologies and experiences to address this? Digital disparities as well as access are both important to consider here. Further, recent changes in access to services such as abortion combine with disability and race to put these intersecting populations at high risk.
Relevant Readings:
- Challenging Invisibility, Making Connections: Illness, Survival, and Black Struggles in Audre Lorde’s Work in: “Blackness and Disability” Critical Examinations and Cultural Interventions. Pages 47-74; Yun, Tae-Jung, et al
- Using SMS to provide continuous assessment and improve health outcomes for children with asthma
- ACM SIGHIT 2012; COMPOUNDED DISPARITIES: Health Equity at the Intersection of Disability, Race, and Ethnicity
Governmentality
How does racial bias and ableism impact algorithms used by the government for homeless service provision, policing, healthcare service provision and health equity, and more? How does this affect disabled people in liminal spaces, such as the use of surveillance on migrants and asylum seekers? How does the risk of disclosing disability impact immigration status among people of color, for example? What new algorithms and technologies can address this?
Relevant Readings:
Online access, ableism and racism
Online life is becoming an increasingly important aspect of everyday experience. Yet both ableism and racism are an ongoing challenge in these spaces. How do they intersect? From image and video descriptions to avatar representations to hate speech, what does it mean to reconsider this experience in ways that question who is included?
Relevant Readings:
- Bennett et al: “It’s Complicated”: Negotiating Accessibility and (Mis)Representation in Image Descriptions of Race, Gender, and Disability, ACM CHI 2021
Read about the CREATE Race, Disability & Technology Call for Proposals