Please log in to rate and comment on entries or to edit your profile.

Report an entry issue

external link Accessible Air Travel: A Guide for People with Disabilities

We hope to keep entries in ACCESS Main Street as up-to-date and informative as possible. Please tell us how we can improve this entry.

Prefer to submit this information another way?
See the Contact information for ACCESS Main Street

It took me several years of struggling with the heavy door to my building, sometimes having to wait until a person stronger came along, to realize that the door was an accessibility problem, not only for me, but for others as well. And I did not notice, until one of my students pointed it out, that the lack of signs that could be read from a distance at my university forced people with mobility impairments to expend a lot of energy unnecessarily, searching for rooms and offices. Although I have encountered this difficulty myself on days when walking was exhausting to me, I interpreted it, automatically, as a problem arising from my illness (as I did with the door), rather than as a problem arising from the built environment having been created for too narrow a range of people and situations.

Susan Wendell, author of
The Rejected Body: Feminist Philosophical Reflections on Disability