Leadership

Disability Leadership Built From Lived Experience

Leadership is not only about holding a title, running an organisation or standing on a stage. Leadership can begin quietly, through lived experience, courage, problem-solving and the decision to speak up when something needs to change.

Disability leadership recognises that disabled people are experts in their own lives. Disabled people understand barriers, access needs, exclusion and inclusion in ways that cannot be fully understood from the outside.

Leadership Begins With Voice

When disabled people are heard, communities become stronger. Lived experience can improve services, guide better decisions and create more inclusive futures for everyone.

What Disability Leadership Can Look Like

Self-Advocacy

Speaking up for your own needs, rights and choices is one of the first forms of leadership.

Community Leadership

Sharing ideas, joining groups and helping others can create positive change in local communities.

Family Leadership

Disabled people, parents and whānau often lead by navigating systems, finding support and creating pathways.

Advocacy

Advocacy helps challenge barriers, raise awareness and make sure disabled people are included in decisions.

Mentoring Others

Leadership can mean encouraging someone else, sharing knowledge or helping another person believe in themselves.

Creating Change

Disabled leaders can influence schools, workplaces, councils, services and public spaces to become more inclusive.

You Do Not Need Permission to Lead

Leadership starts when you recognise that your experience has value. Your voice, your ideas and your story can help shape a better world.

Disability leadership is not about being perfect. It is about taking part, speaking up, learning, growing and helping others see what inclusion can look like.

Scroll to Top