Pre-order “Digital Accessibility Ethics”
Lainey Feingold, Reginé Gilbert, and Chancey Fleet gathered 36 authors across 10 countries and a commonwealth to write 32 chapters about ethics in digital accessibility. I am one of those 36 authors.
The book introduces the first (that I’ve heard of) Digital Accessibility Ethics Framework. It’s a three-part tool intended to influence, change, & disrupt patterns of disability exclusion. #DigitalAccessibilityEthics is now a hashtag on Masto (try your own instance), Bluesky, and LinkedIn.
My chapter covers overlays and their false marketing claims.
The goal of the Framework, and the goal of the book, is to help make the digital world more accessible to disabled people across the globe and to help organizations mitigate the risks of disability exclusion.
Get the details from the publisher, Taylor and Francis, and pre-order it from Amazon or your local independent book retailer. Pre-orders are good as it helps the publisher do things like know that I’m awesome at marketing the book.
Table of Contents
Lainey gathered the LinkedIn profiles of all the authors (I haven’t taken the time to track down their personal pages), so I linked them from their chapters.
- Introduction: The Digital Accessibility Gap and the Need for an Ethics Framework
- Section One: Foundation
- Introducing the Digital Accessibility Ethics Framework; Lainey Feingold, Reginé Gilbert, and Chancey Fleet
- Disability and Accessibility: Understanding the Terms at the Heart of this Collection; Crystal Preston Watson
- The Ethical Dilemmas of Artificial Intelligence; Jutta Treviranus
- The Global Digital Accessibility Legal Landscape; Lainey Feingold
- Section Two: Ethical Accessibility Practices
- Designing With: Widening Power and Participation of Disabled People in the Design Process; Josh Kim
- Achieving Ethical Accessibility in the Development Process; Léonie Watson
- The Ethics of Accessibility Leadership in India and Across the Globe; Shilpi Kapoor
- Empower All Minds: Cognitive Accessibility Ethics; Margaux Joffe
- Don’t Buy Broken Things: Ethical Accessible Procurement; Sheri Byrne-Haber
- Hackathons, Student Projects, and Digital Accessibility Ethics; Joshua A. Miele
- Deaf Leaders Now! The Ethics of Hiring Disabled People in Science and Technology; Jenny C. Lu and Sheila Xu
- Making Every Voice Heard: The Ethics of Voice Recognition Technology; Meenakshi Das
- Digital Accessibility Ethics in Africa: Progress, Challenges, and Opportunities; Irene Mbari-Kirika and Dr. Samuel Kabue
- Who Sees What? Ethics Issues in Describing the Visual World; Nefertiti Matos Olivares and Thomas Reid
- Facial Difference, AI Bias, and Digital Accessibility Ethics; Carly Findlay
- Everyone Needs (At Least A Little) Accessibility Education; Rolando J. Méndez Fernández and Kate Sonka
- Accessibility Overlays and the Harms of Marketing “Quick Fixes”; Adrian A. Roselli
- Accessibility Practitioner Burnout is an Ethics Issue; Matt May
- Section Three: Digital Accessibility Ethics Across Sectors
- No One Left Behind: Digital Accessibility Ethics and Emergency Preparedness; Erin E. Brown
- When My Seeing Eye Dog and I Surprise a Delivery Robot: New Technologies Need to be Accessible, Too; Haben Girma
- Secure by Design, Accessible by Default: Building Cybersecurity Ethics That Include Everyone; Aliyu G. Yisa and Justin Merhoff
- From Both Sides of the Stethoscope: Digital Accessibility Ethics in Healthcare; Dr. Heidi Joshi and Dr. Oluwaferanmi O. Okanlami
- Beyond Technology: Ethics and Strategies for Inclusive Smart Cities; Monica Duhem, Josefina Ocampo Guchea, and James Thurston
- Tech-Facilitated Disability Discrimination and Artificial Intelligence Tools at Work; Ariana Aboulafia
- Who Gets to Read, Who Gets to Publish? Digital Accessibility Ethics for Authors, Journalists, and Publishers; Laura Brady and Daniella Levy-Pinto
- Democracy for All: Addressing Accessibility Challenges for Disabled Voters; Jess Moore Matthews, MA
- Digital Accessibility and Open Source Need Each Other; Mike Gifford
- Immersive Technology Needs Digital Accessibility Ethics; Reginé Gilbert
- Public Relations, Marketing, Accessibility, and Ethics; Victoria Ottah Nnenna
- The Future of Game Accessibility is Grounded in Ethics; Aderyn Thompson
- Digital Accessibility and Public Digital Amenities; Chancey Fleet
- Legal Ethics, Access to Justice, and the Need for Digital Accessibility; Lainey Feingold
- Conclusion: What’s Next for Digital Accessibility Ethics?
From the Publisher
Digital Accessibility Ethics is a practical guide with an urgent goal: to help end tech exclusion of 1.3 billion people across the world with disabilities.
The book introduces the first Digital Accessibility Ethics Framework – an action-oriented, three-part tool designed to influence, change, and disrupt patterns of exclusion with values, actions, and questions. This edited collection is written by 39 authors from 10 countries and one commonwealth, the majority of whom are disabled.
The editors and authors have over 600 years of combined accessibility and disability advocacy experience. They offer and apply an ethics lens that supports disabled people’s right to fully participate in every facet of digital life. It is a lens that helps organizations reduce the financial, legal, privacy, safety, and other risks and harms of disability exclusion.
Through stories, recommendations, strategies, and other guidance, the book looks at a wide range of topics through the Digital Accessibility Ethics Framework: from gaming and smart cities to hackathons, procurement, and cybersecurity. From accessibility practitioner burnout, to robots, artificial intelligence, workplace software, aerospace, design, healthcare, open source, emergency preparedness, legal ethics, publishing, and much more.
This book is for leaders in all these fields. And it is for all technologists, educators, students, marketers, policy makers and everyone who has ever posted on social media or sent an email. It encourages us to stop and ask ourselves: who are we excluding when digital accessibility is ignored? Who are we harming, what are we risking, by our decisions?
As the world grows more digital, as AI is marketed everywhere, and as the number of people with disabilities continues to grow, there has never been a more urgent time to expose, explore, and act at the intersection of ethics, disability, and digital accessibility. Digital Accessibility Ethics offers a roadmap to show us the way.
An accessible digital version of the book will be available, upon publication.
- Paperback: ISBN 9781041018681
- Hardback: ISBN 9781041018698
- 368 Pages, 21 color and 20 black-and-white illustrations
- March 26, 2026 by Chapman & Hall
Wrap-up
If you read this far, you may have skipped that link to pre-order it from Amazon, though you could also contact your local independent book retailer and ask them to pre-order it.
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