When integrated into signage, the international symbol of accessibility designates accessible spaces and facilities. In just a few decades, this icon has become ubiquitous throughout the world, now seen in nearly every airport, parking lot and public space. The diverse local interpretations of the icon mirror the shift from exclusion to inclusion of disabled people in the human rights revolution witnessed since the end of WWII. The traditional icon displays a figure and a real life object. In so doing, the access icon unwittingly creates a cyborg (see Haraway 1991): the wheelchair and its human user become one. Paradoxically, this global icon refers simultaneously to disability, and its ameliorating factor, accessibility. Only recently has ...
The United Nations General Assembly in New York City adopted the International Convention on the Rig...
For millions of disabled people around the world the wheelchair has been one of the most important t...
Since the mid-1960s, the concept of accessibility has evolved into a key notion for making modern we...
When integrated into signage, the international symbol of accessibility designates accessible spaces...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA), when integrated into signage, is meant to designate spaces...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA) is one of the most recognized in the world and for last 45 ...
One of the most recognizable symbols is the International Symbol of Access (ISA) (Ben-Moshe, L & Pow...
In 2012, a new International Symbol of Access (ISA) has been introduced by designers Sara Hendren an...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA), used in a variety of specific locations to represent purpo...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA), used in a variety of specific locations to represent purpo...
This paper uses a cultural studies lens to suggest that the ISA confers a semiotic imposition of “ot...
Not only was 1981 the United Nations’ International Year of Disabled Persons (IYDP), but the followi...
Founded by Edgar F. Allen in 1922 in Elyria, Ohio as The International Society for Crippled Children...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA) produces, capacitates, and debilitates disability in partic...
The United Nations General Assembly in New York City adopted the International Convention on the Rig...
For millions of disabled people around the world the wheelchair has been one of the most important t...
Since the mid-1960s, the concept of accessibility has evolved into a key notion for making modern we...
When integrated into signage, the international symbol of accessibility designates accessible spaces...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA), when integrated into signage, is meant to designate spaces...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA) is one of the most recognized in the world and for last 45 ...
One of the most recognizable symbols is the International Symbol of Access (ISA) (Ben-Moshe, L & Pow...
In 2012, a new International Symbol of Access (ISA) has been introduced by designers Sara Hendren an...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA), used in a variety of specific locations to represent purpo...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA), used in a variety of specific locations to represent purpo...
This paper uses a cultural studies lens to suggest that the ISA confers a semiotic imposition of “ot...
Not only was 1981 the United Nations’ International Year of Disabled Persons (IYDP), but the followi...
Founded by Edgar F. Allen in 1922 in Elyria, Ohio as The International Society for Crippled Children...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA) produces, capacitates, and debilitates disability in partic...
The United Nations General Assembly in New York City adopted the International Convention on the Rig...
For millions of disabled people around the world the wheelchair has been one of the most important t...
Since the mid-1960s, the concept of accessibility has evolved into a key notion for making modern we...