Deaf Researchers’ Experience Seminar Recording
In September EDICa hosted a panel discussing deaf researchers’ experience of UK academia.
Published : 24/09/2024
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What is it like being a deaf researcher in the UK’s academia? What barriers persist? How have they navigated barrirers? Do deaf researchers have the same opportunities as their hearing colleagues? Who have been the best allies? What good to EDI policies do? How does race and gender intersect with the deaf experience?
About the seminar
EDICa’s workstream on the enabling workspaces focuses on the how research & innovation institutions can make the workplace more inclusive for disabled people. In this seminar, we hosted a panel of four deaf researchers from different career stages and disciplines, discussing what it’s like working in the UK’s research sector.
The discussion took place in British Sign Language, interpreted into spoken English by two interpreters. EDICa’s Deputy Principal Investigator, Prof Jemina Napier, chaired the discussion.
During Prof Napier’s introduction, which involved slides, Zoom did not capture her signing alongside the slides. There’s just the interpreter’s voice and the slide, which makes it accessible to deaf people only through the captions. There is an alternative recording which shows Prof Napier signing the introduction, but the slides aren’t visible. The slides can be downloaded here: slides.
A full transcript of the seminar can be downloaded here.
Closed captions have been carefully corrected.
About the panel
- Ixone Sáenz Paraíso is a PhD student at Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Spain. Ixone was born and raised in the Basque region of Spain, and completed a masters in data science at London South Bank University. She worked with Heriot-Watt University and the University of Edinburgh on a glossary of data terms in British Sign Language. Read more about that by clicking here.
- Dr Mette Sommer Lindsay is an Assistant Professor in Languages and Intercultural Studies at Heriot-Watt University. She’s originally from Denmark and researches Deaf and Disability studies, employment sociology and minority entrepreneurship.
- Dr Luigi Lerose is a Senior Research Fellow and Senior Lecturer in Sign Language at UCLAN (University of Central Lancaster). Luigi is Culturally Deaf and graduated from Alpen Adria University in Austria, and has served as President/Chair of the European Network of Sign Language Teachers from 2017-2023. His research focuses on sign language, linguistics, and language pedagogy.
- Dr Emma Ferguson-Coleman just started this August as a Lecturer in dementia and ageing at the University of West London. She had previously spent 14 years working at the University of Manchester, working in the field of mental health and deafness. In this video, Emma introduces herself, “I am lesbian, I am vegan, and I am not an ideal academic”. She goes on to tell a story about her life experience and representation.
- Prof Jemina Napier grew up as a hearing person with a number of deaf family members. She became a BSL interpreter and continued on to study linguistics. She also works in Australian Sign Language (she did her PhD at Macquarie University in Australia) and International Sign. At Heriot-Watt University, Jemina is currently the Associate Principal for Research Culture & People. Jemina recently did a podcast with “Language on the Move” discussing her book about Sign Language Brokering where she touches on her background and the changes in acceptance of children signing for family members. Click here to access.
Other related resources
EDICa hosts a regular blog and seminars, as well as collecting a library of resources of equality, diversity & inclusion practices in research & innovation.
Disabled people are missing from Antarctic EDI work: how do we fix it?
Date: 23 May 2024
A guest blog by Alice Oates, a 2023 Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) Fellow.
Do deaf women feel safe on campus? A qualitative case study of one UK university
Date: January 2021
An article reporting on 5 interviews of deaf women working or studying on a UK campus about their feelings of safety.
Guide for employers working with deaf sign language users
Date: 1st July 2019
A useful, research-based guide for employers on how to recruit, support and retain deaf sign language users.