Original photo by Chona Kasinger for the Disabled And Here project. A black non-binary person stands casually outside a cafe, dressed in all black with a shaved head, glasses, a red lip, along with moon earrings. https://affecttheverb.com/disabledandhere/

Disability Rights in Technology Policy

As technology becomes increasingly integrated into everyday life, concerns surrounding personal and data privacy, security, and discrimination become more widespread. However, the impacts of various technologies (including artificial intelligence) on people with disabilities are often ignored.  

CDT’s Project on Disability Rights in Technology Policy seeks to address this gap. We analyze technology and tech policies – like the use of algorithms in employment and benefits determinations, surveillance technologies, and more – and report on how they impact disabled people. 

We consider these impacts in fields as far-ranging as workers’ rights, health privacy, criminal justice, voter rights, and education. The project assesses risks, analyzes gaps in existing legal and policy protections, and seeks to center the perspectives of people with disabilities in efforts to advocate for fairness, transparency, accountability, and justice.

CDT advocates for careful and thoughtful regulation of technologies and policies that disproportionately affect disabled people, especially those who are multiply marginalized. Our work is guided by our partner organizations in the disability community as well as CDT’s Advisory Council on Disability Rights in Technology Policy, which includes leading experts in disability and tech, many of whom are disabled themselves.

The project works to build and share expertise among policymakers, researchers, advocates, and disabled community members. We aim to develop actionable guidance for companies, regulators, legislators, and advocates to remedy the harms that we identify. Above all else, we consistently prioritize disability in technology policy and illuminate the impacts – both positive and negative – of technology on disabled people.

Meet our Advisory Committee on Disability Rights in Technology Policy.

Recent Content

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CDT Submits Comments Outlining Dangers of SSA About-Face Blocking Vulnerable Beneficiaries from Accessing Critical Benefits

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Op-Ed – DOGE & Disability Rights: Three Key Tech Policy Concerns

Graphic for CDT report, entitled "Building A Disability-Inclusive AI Ecosystem." Illustration with a mainframe computer, surrounded by web browser windows showing persons with disabilities in different contextual data systems, and data blocks. Top to bottom, left to right: person in a blue shirt wearing headphones; person in an orange shirt; person in a green shirt wearing a NJ tube; person in a purple shirt with a limb difference.

Building A Disability-Inclusive AI Ecosystem: A Cross-Disability, Cross-Systems Analysis Of Best Practices

Recommendations for Policymakers and Public Administrators to Advance Responsible AI Governance Practices and Disability Rights. White document on a grey background.

Recommendations for Policymakers and Public Administrators to Advance Responsible AI Governance Practices and Disability Rights

The CDT logo. A light and dark grey "cdt" alongside "Center for Democracy & Technology" on a white background.

Op-Ed: Amidst Flurry Of Anti-DEI Measures, Meta’s Content Moderation Policies Will Harm People With Disabilities

Graphic for CDT Research report, entitled "Screened Out: The Impact of Digitized Hiring Assessments on Disabled Workers." A multi-panel color illustration includes a wheelchair user typing, a person with headphones facing an error on a laptop, a close-up of a person with a hearing aid, and a person with glasses. Geometric shapes and icons connect these panels, highlighting hiring assessments and discrimination disabled people face.

Screened Out: The Impact of Digitized Hiring Assessments on Disabled Workers

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