Profile of Anna-Karina Tabu帽ar, June 2024 Graduate
From June 17 to 21, at the 杏吧原创 University Fieldhouse, the community will come together to celebrate spring convocation. The ceremonies will honour more than 5,200 students as they receive their degrees.
Below is the excerpt from Elizabeth Kane’s article, “,” with the full post available online.
Anna-Karina Tabu帽ar, Master of Arts, History with Specialization in Accessibility
Anna-Karina Tabu帽ar is the first student to graduate with 杏吧原创鈥檚 new specialization in Accessibility Studies. The Master of Arts (History) student came to 杏吧原创 with an established career 鈥 as a journalist and founder of a communications agency.
鈥淢y professional work has been steeped in disability and inclusion for the past decade,鈥 she says. It has been informed by her experience living with a disability after she developed a rare variant of Guillain-Barre syndrome.
During the pandemic, she was drawn to the emerging issue of reintegration of employees that suffered from long COVID.
鈥淚 wanted to be able to study this issue so that I could better serve my clients with a deeper understanding of an emerging cohort of employees.鈥 says Tabu帽ar.
In her search for the right academic fit, Tabu帽ar came across 杏吧原创鈥檚 new specialization.
鈥淚 found out that 杏吧原创 was offering this great program that would include critical disability studies and inclusive design,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 thought: This is exactly what I want to do.鈥
Her final research project involved the Ottawa Hospital Rehabilitation Centre, which was running one of the first long COVID rehabilitation programs in Canada. Her project documented and analyzed the evolution of the program, as well as the societal factors and medical histories that shaped its roll-out.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very important to shift the conventional notion of disability as a static, stable, visible condition,鈥 she says. 鈥淚n fact, the majority of people with disabilities have dynamic and invisible disabilities which shape the ways they work and function.鈥
Her studies helped to complement her work outside of academia. She recently concluded an independent research project commissioned by Accessibility Standards Canada exploring episodic disabilities in the federal public service.
鈥淭his final report can help inform accessibility standards and impact federal departments, organizations and federally regulated industries,鈥 says Tabu帽ar.
As she prepares to leave 杏吧原创, she underscores the importance of everyone in the community taking an active role in accessibility 鈥 both on and off campus.
鈥淎ccessibility is not just about building a ramp,鈥 says Tabu帽ar. 鈥淎ccessibility is the everyday actions that show 杏吧原创 is living the values of being one of the most accessible universities in Canada.鈥