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Episode Summary
In this episode of Reimagining Disabled Futures, DAWN Canada concludes a three-part series sharing insights from focus group participants involved in the Feminist Economic Recovery Project, part of Mapping Our Future: A 10-Year Vision for Change for Women with Disabilities. Thisepisode centres the lived experiences of women and gender-diverse people with disabilities as they define what it means to live well, navigate barriers to essential services, and imagine what feminist recovery could look like in practice.
Participants reflect on how disability, chronic illness, caregiving responsibilities, and systemic exclusion shape daily life. The conversation highlights the cumulative impact of inaccessible healthcare, housing insecurity, punitive financial support systems, and excessive paperwork. Throughout the episode, participants emphasize that recovery must move beyond individual resilience and instead address the structural conditions that undermine dignity, safety, and wellbeing.
Participants: Focus group participants from DAWN Canada’s Feminist Economic Recovery Project, representing diverse disabilities, genders, regions, and lived experiences.
Key Topics Covered:
Defining "Living Well" with Disability
Access to Essential ServicesParticipants identify multiple barriers across systems:
Community, Care and Disillusionment The episode explores both the promise and limits of community care.
What Feminist Recovery Could Look Like
Reflections:
This episode underscores that feminist recovery must be grounded in disability justice and lived experience. Participants make clear that recovery is not about returning to pre-pandemic norms, but about transforming systems that continue to produce harm. Living well requires dignity, autonomy, safety, and community — conditions that cannot be achieved without structural change.Download the transcript
Parenting, caregiving,and isolation significantly shape experiences of wellbeing.
By DAWN CanadaEpisode Summary
In this episode of Reimagining Disabled Futures, DAWN Canada concludes a three-part series sharing insights from focus group participants involved in the Feminist Economic Recovery Project, part of Mapping Our Future: A 10-Year Vision for Change for Women with Disabilities. Thisepisode centres the lived experiences of women and gender-diverse people with disabilities as they define what it means to live well, navigate barriers to essential services, and imagine what feminist recovery could look like in practice.
Participants reflect on how disability, chronic illness, caregiving responsibilities, and systemic exclusion shape daily life. The conversation highlights the cumulative impact of inaccessible healthcare, housing insecurity, punitive financial support systems, and excessive paperwork. Throughout the episode, participants emphasize that recovery must move beyond individual resilience and instead address the structural conditions that undermine dignity, safety, and wellbeing.
Participants: Focus group participants from DAWN Canada’s Feminist Economic Recovery Project, representing diverse disabilities, genders, regions, and lived experiences.
Key Topics Covered:
Defining "Living Well" with Disability
Access to Essential ServicesParticipants identify multiple barriers across systems:
Community, Care and Disillusionment The episode explores both the promise and limits of community care.
What Feminist Recovery Could Look Like
Reflections:
This episode underscores that feminist recovery must be grounded in disability justice and lived experience. Participants make clear that recovery is not about returning to pre-pandemic norms, but about transforming systems that continue to produce harm. Living well requires dignity, autonomy, safety, and community — conditions that cannot be achieved without structural change.Download the transcript
Parenting, caregiving,and isolation significantly shape experiences of wellbeing.