0:00
/
0:00
Transcript

Dr Rebekah Graham: The RSB, Disability, and the Politics of Exclusion

How the RSB risks entrenching colonial ableism, undermining disability rights, and blocking inclusion at every level of public life.

🎧 Coherent podcast with Melanie Nelson

In this wide-ranging and deeply grounded conversation, I speak with Dr Rebekah Graham — community psychologist, writer, and advocate for disability rights — about the hidden but sweeping risks the Regulatory Standards Bill (RSB) poses for disabled communities, and for the future of equity and inclusion in New Zealand.

Dr Graham draws on her work with Parents of Vision Impaired and her long-standing research on material hardship and food insecurity to expose how the RSB could entrench colonial ableism and make basic accessibility measures harder to introduce — or defend. From signalised pedestrian crossings to braille on medication, from inclusive education to accessible banking and housing, she explains how the Bill’s libertarian principles would undermine everyday rights and protections, while entrenching systemic disparities.

We discuss:

  • How the RSB’s emphasis on property rights, cost-efficiency, and formal equality contradicts both the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP)

  • The chilling effect the Bill could have on accessibility legislation, including universal design, equitable resourcing in schools, and inclusive infrastructure

  • How charter schools, under the RSB, could become inaccessible and unaccountable — while being harder to reverse

  • The risks of shifting from collectivist, whānau-centred approaches to a narrow, individualised model of rights and value

  • The real-world consequences of colonial ableism, and why disabled children and their families are already navigating structural exclusion

Dr Graham also explains why this Bill is not a dry, technical fix — but a sweeping constitutional move that threatens to redefine what “good lawmaking” means in New Zealand. And she makes a powerful call to action: for people to contact their MPs, especially in National and New Zealand First, to reject the RSB and protect the social good.

Listen to the audio here on Substack, or on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and other platforms (once uploaded).

0:00
-1:04:07

Follow

on Substack for more of her wonderful commentary and analysis on social issues in Aotearoa.

Resources:

Sector Specific RSB Tool: https://tinyurl.com/RSBTool

Linktree with a wide range of historic and contemporary information on the RSB, including submission guides and builders.

Buy Me a Coffee

Subscribe to stay informed about the Regulatory Standards Bill and efforts to resist its impacts. Paid subscriptions help keep this work independent and accessible.

Know someone who needs to hear this? Share the episode and help spread the word about what’s at stake.

Share

Discussion about this video