Law and Policy Reports
For each of the five project countries, we completed an extensive law and policy analysis, available on the Project website. These cover law at national, state and city levels; a range of policy contexts (eg disability, older people, transport, planning and equality); and various types of law (eg constitutional, human rights, equality, tort, criminal and traffic law). These informed our interviews, particularly with stakeholders, and provided the basis for our awareness-raising guides discussed below.
Fieldwork
Across the five project countries, we interviewed 278 pedestrians about exclusionary experiences in two selected cities per country; and 119 stakeholders who engaged with problems of inaccessible streets as lawyers, policy-makers, planners or activists/influencers. Because of COVID, these interviews took place online or by phone rather than in person. We also worked with interested pedestrian participants to produce film footage of exclusionary environments and interactions.
Film Production
First, we produced a set of short documentaries for each project country. Most highlight specific thematic concerns (eg poor drainage, parking on pavements) identified as priorities by interviewees.Footage is of streets selected by interviewees, often including images of them. Quotes from interviews are incorporated. City-focused films (covering several themes) were made for Mombasa and Nairobi in response to interviewee requests.
Second, we produced a set of virtual reality films for each country. These are filmed either from the perspective of one of our pedestrian participants, or from that of a person walking close behind them.
Awareness-Raising Guides
For each country we created two types of guide, underpinned by relevant law and shaped by the interview data. One is aimed at disabled pedestrians encountering accessibility barriers; and the other at people using or occupying street spaces interested in more inclusive practice.
Dissemination
We held public lectures in each country, as well as in-person workshops with participants, focusing on disseminating and discussing emerging findings. We have also disseminated our work through a dedicated IPS final conference in Leeds; and papers at conferences in many other countries (eg Ireland, Italy, Germany, Sweden, Norway) and to international online audiences. Further we have published in open access journals, academic and lay; and established an impactful website.