This Summer 2025–26 Edition of the Canberra Disability Review confronts a year marked by stalled reform and mounting barriers. The editorial cuts through political optics to expose the human consequences of inaction. This edition is both a warning and an invitation—a call to rest, to re-imagine, and to fight for change grounded in evidence, dignity, and the voices of those most affected. To read the review go to www.advocacyforinclusion.org/cdr/ Support the show
All content for Supported Decision Making Podcast is the property of Advocacy for Inclusion and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This Summer 2025–26 Edition of the Canberra Disability Review confronts a year marked by stalled reform and mounting barriers. The editorial cuts through political optics to expose the human consequences of inaction. This edition is both a warning and an invitation—a call to rest, to re-imagine, and to fight for change grounded in evidence, dignity, and the voices of those most affected. To read the review go to www.advocacyforinclusion.org/cdr/ Support the show
The Things A Body Knows: An interview with award winning poet Andy Jackson
Supported Decision Making Podcast
29 minutes
2 years ago
The Things A Body Knows: An interview with award winning poet Andy Jackson
Andy Jackson is a poet and creative writing teacher who was awarded RMIT’s Future of Health Fellowship. Andy’s book “Human Looking” – a poetry collection that gives voice to a range of experiences of people with disability – won the 2022 Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Poetry. In our interview we explore ideas of health, the challenging and problematic pursuit of “normal” in the health care context, the nature of fears that possibly drive the ableist instinct, and the place that creatives...
Supported Decision Making Podcast
This Summer 2025–26 Edition of the Canberra Disability Review confronts a year marked by stalled reform and mounting barriers. The editorial cuts through political optics to expose the human consequences of inaction. This edition is both a warning and an invitation—a call to rest, to re-imagine, and to fight for change grounded in evidence, dignity, and the voices of those most affected. To read the review go to www.advocacyforinclusion.org/cdr/ Support the show