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How to create a more equitable future for women with a disability in sport

    In 2012, my life was abruptly up-ended after a planned routine hip surgery instead uncovered something far worse, which resulted in disability.

    On top of the excruciating chronic pain, limited walking ability, and constant brain fog, what was the most devastating to me at the time was that I could no longer play the game I love.

    Basketball was one of the most important parts of my life. It felt like I had lost part of my identity.

    Then someone suggested playing wheelchair basketball. The thought had never really crossed my mind as, like most people, I assumed you had to use a wheelchair full-time.

    But this person assured me that actually people with many different types of disability played wheelchair basketball, including many people like me.

    So, I went and tried it out. And it was incredible — I could play sport again.

    Munro-Cook was a key member of the Gliders’ team at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics.  ()

    When I began, I could barely push the chair around, and I when I tried to shoot I could barely hit the ring, but it gave me a chance to regain my sense of purpose.

    I was quickly invited to attend an Australian team camp, and nine years later I became captain of the Australian Gliders at the Tokyo Paralympics.

    But it wasn’t just the actual game of basketball that was important in regaining my sense of self.

    My experience playing with the Australian Gliders has helped me come to terms with my disability and learn from others in how to negotiate living in a world that still puts up barriers for so many people with a disability.

    Making women with a disability visible

    Brodie Smith represented Australia in goalball at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics.()

    While my experience has been great, the overall picture is not so rosy. Just 19 per cent of women with a disability are involved in organised sport, compared to 34 per cent of non-disabled women and 27 per cent of men with a disability.

    At the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games, the Australian team was made up of 43.6 per cent women-identified athletes. While that may have been above the worldwide average of 42.08 per cent, it was still below the Australian Olympic team, which comprised of 54 per cent women.

    Paralympics Australia has recently released a strategic plan that includes an impassioned plea to invest in disability sport.

    Pointing out that “of the 4.3 million people with a disability, only one in four participates in sport, while three in four want to participate,” Paralympics Australia has rightly identified the need to change the sporting landscape to ensure a more equitable future.



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