WAI resources - mainstream developers - projects, research, resources - papers
and articles
Key Web accessibility resources at W3C.
Links to accessibility information at mainstream Web software developers.
(Additional information
welcome.)
Assorted links to projects, research, resources related to Web
accessibility at other organizations. Please note separate list of links to
legal, policy, and governmental Web
sites relating to Web accessibility. (Additional information
welcome.)
- Adaptive Technology Resource
Centre, University of Toronto
- The Archimedes
Project, Stanford University
- Aware Center, HTML Writers
Guild
- Bartimeus Educational Institute,
The Netherlands, Accessibility.nl
- Center for Applied Special Technology
(CAST)
- Do-It Program, University
of Washington
- National Center for
Accessible Media (NCAM), WGBH
- PASIG
(Portuguese Accessibility Special Interest Group)
- Project
MATHS (Mathematical Access for Technology and Science for Visually
Disabled Users)
- Project HIIT: Internet for the
Hearing Impaired
- Royal National Institute for the Blind's Accessing
Technology fact sheet
- SIDAR, Seminario de Iniciativas
sobre Discapacidad y Accesibilidad en la Red
- Science Access Project
- Starling Access Services
- TEDIS (Technological Enabling of
Disabled and Older People, GMD
- Trace Research and Development
Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison
- Videncenter for Synshandicap,
Denmark
- Web 3D Consortium
Also see Policies
Relating to Web Accessibility which includes some policy papers.
- Disabled
Accessibility, the Pragmatic Approach, by Jakob Nielsen
- Global Trends
that will Impact Universal Access to Information Resources, by
Christine Maxwell, ed., on behalf of the Internet Society (paper
submitted to UNESO July 15, 2000)
- Nomadicity,
Disability Access, and the Every-Citizen Interface, by Dr. Gregg
Vanderheiden, Trace R&D Center
- People with
Disabilities and NII: Breaking Down Barriers, Building Choice, by
Susan Brummel, CITA
- Universal Access to the
National Information Infrastructure (NII), by Dr. Gregg Vanderheiden,
Trace R&D Center
Comments or additions to this page? wai-site-comments@w3.org
Questions about WAI? wai@w3.org