Disability & Sexuality Lab Podcast

Disability & Sexuality Lab Podcast
Podcast Description
Welcome to the Disability and Sexuality Lab Podcast – where no topic is off-limits. Our mission is to create a safe space for open, honest conversations about disability and sexuality. In our first season, we’re taking you on a global journey, interviewing scholars from places like Malta, Sweden, and Australia. Join us as we explore the diverse and often overlooked perspectives in this vital conversation.
Podcast Insights
Content Themes
The podcast explores themes such as inclusive sexuality education, disability justice, and the intersection of gender and sexual identities, with specific episodes highlighting topics like rights-based sexual education, cultural taboos in LGBTQ+ spaces, and the importance of representation for disabled individuals. For example, episodes have delved into advocacy for disabled sexual rights, the complexities of navigating relationships while disabled, and creative activism movements.

Welcome to the Disability and Sexuality Lab Podcast – where no topic is off-limits. Our mission is to create a safe space for open, honest conversations about disability and sexuality. In our first season, we’re taking you on a global journey, interviewing scholars from places like Malta, Sweden, and Australia. Join us as we explore the diverse and often overlooked perspectives in this vital conversation.
In this episode of the Disability and Sexuality Lab Podcast, we welcome Dr. Amy McPherson—senior scientist at Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital and associate professor at the University of Toronto. With a background spanning taboo health topics, psychotherapy, and participatory research, Amy brings a refreshingly practical, inclusive, and justice-oriented lens to conversations about disability and sexuality.
We explore the birth of the Let’s Talk Disability and Sex hub, the importance of collaborative and culturally responsive resource development, and how participatory methods—like photovoice and arts-based exhibits—create space for disabled youth to reclaim their sexual identities on their own terms. Amy also discusses knowledge mobilization that works, including her work with the ProFILE lab and her belief in starting with people’s lived realities—not researcher assumptions.
From DIY sex toy adaptation workshops to the growing backlash against inclusive sex ed, Amy reflects on how ableism and stigma remain barriers to sexual expression, and why representation, intersectionality, and humor matter. With humility and care, she emphasizes the value of asking questions, centering disabled voices, and creating research that serves real-world needs.
This episode is a thoughtful, hopeful look at what it means to build a world where pleasure, intimacy, and sexual health belong to everyone.

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