The UN in Geneva questions the UK government on its commitment to disabled people. We speak to two people who followed the proceedings - disability reporter Rachel Charlton-Dailey and Rensa Gaunt from Inclusion London, which campaigns for equality for deaf and disabled people.
Actress and broadcaster Madison Tevlin on challenging assumptions about disabled people - and why having Down’s Syndrome is her least interesting trait.
Plus Don Biswas talks neurodiverse comedy.
The episode was made by Daniel Gordon with Niamh Hughes and Emma Tracey. The editor is Alex Lewis. Recorded and mixed by Dave O’Neill.
To get in touch with the team email accessall@bbc.co..uk or find us on X, @bbcaccessall. Don’t forget to subscribe by finding us on BBC Sounds.
What’s the beef with McDonald’s paper straws?
Sex, with these hips?
The artist who believes he’s a zombie
Deaf Poets Society (Repeat)
This disabled comedian is a Jerk
The gig emergency that made music accessible
Disabled People Are Hot
My daughter has my disability and that’s OK
Why the hashtag #ThingsDisabledPeopleKnow went viral
'I will drop you in awkwardness'
‘I slid down the banisters and fell on my head’
Christmas repeat: The date saboteur and the make-up store terror
Christmas repeat: Passionately kissing your ‘mum’ to prove a point
The dilemmas of Quizmas
'I pushed Kelly Fletcher off the stool'
Stories about pooing in a bag
'Disabled people make the best entrepreneurs'
“We made conversation while my daughter licked the pavement”
Bake Off Briony’s kitchen hacks and Kitch the rapper
What happens when the beat drops?
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