CIP’s 10th Anniversary: Reflections and Next Steps

Summary

The Center for Inclusive Policy (CIP) celebrated its ten-year milestone with an event that was both warm and globally connected: a chance to reflect on a decade of turning evidence into action, and to envision the future of inclusive policy. The session featured contributions from Daniel Mont (CIP), Maria Ní Fhlatharta (CIP), Tom Shakespeare (LSHTM), Gopal Mitra (UNICEF), Lesley Carson (Wellspring Philanthropic Fund), Meenakshi Balasubramanian (CIP), and Alimata Abdul Karimu (former CIP fellow).

The Center for Inclusive Policy (CIP) marked its tenth anniversary with a celebration that felt both intimate and global: a moment to look back on a decade of bridging data and advocacy, and to imagine what inclusion can look like in the years ahead. Almost 70 participants joined the event, including members of our community, partners, associates, and funders, whose collaboration and commitment have shaped CIP’s journey.

Opening the event, Deputy Director Maria Ní Fhlatharta reflected on CIP’s collective spirit:

“We are as geographically spread out as it is possible for a team to be… And here we are so much more than our staff and our associates and our fellows. It takes a village, and we have a pretty large one.”

At a time when advancing human rights grows increasingly complex, she added, “Being able to take time to collectively reflect on our achievements and look forward to the challenges ahead feels important.”

A short video took the audience on a journey through more than 30 countries where CIP has worked to turn evidence into action.

The film set the stage for a fireside chat between Daniel Mont, CIP’s CEO, and Tom Shakespeare, Board Member and Professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, a conversation that revisited how and why CIP came to be.

“The disability movement successfully raised awareness and fought for rights but had little experience with policy analysis,” Mont recalled. “Meanwhile, development agencies were experts in policy analysis but had little understanding of disability. We created CIP to connect both, and drive action.”

Shakespeare smiled: “I think CIP will be around for as long as you want, because we will always want you.”

That spirit of collaboration ran through the reflections of CIP’s partners and funders. Gopal Mitra, from UNICEF, noted how CIP’s technical expertise has strengthened the sector: “Whether it is strengthening the care and support system for children with disabilities, promoting disability-inclusive financing, or measuring the cost of disability, the contribution of CIP has been significant.”

From the Wellspring Philanthropic Fund, Lesley Carson added:

“When our team faced some pretty high pressure moments to both demonstrate the impact of our grant making in advancing disability rights and also to identify where some promising opportunities and policy space to make real advancements were, we turned again and again to CIP to its research, to its analysis, its field knowledge and credibility.”

The discussion then turned to what comes next. Meenakshi Balasubramanian, Senior Associate and budget analysis specialist, shared CIP’s forward-looking vision in that matter: “In all our endeavors, we try to give stakeholders the tools and information they need to build a more inclusive world. Looking ahead, we envision establishing a global budget coalition dedicated to reforming policies and programs, ensuring that persons with disabilities can freely enjoy all human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis with others.”

The celebration also shone a light on the CIP Fellows Program, which supports emerging researchers with disabilities from LMICs to develop their own research projects based on their local contexts.

Former fellow Alimata Abdul Karimu spoke about how her time with CIP shaped her path: “My engagement with CIP and exposure to global disability policy discourse deepened my understanding of inclusive policy design and strategic implementation. This positioned me to lead the roll out of the United Nations disability inclusion strategy within the United Nations country team in Ghana immediately after my fellowship.

Participants then joined an interactive Mentimeter poll, identifying priorities and challenges for the decade ahead, from better data and sustainable funding to care systems, aging, and climate change.

Colorful word cloud illustrating participants’ reflections on the main challenges in the field. Larger words such as data, funding, social protection, care, aging, climate change, and ableism stand out, surrounded by others like marginalization, disability certification, extra costs, advocacy, capacity building, sexism and racism.

The event closed with a collage of many of CIP’s staff, board, and partners, a visual reminder of how far inclusive policy has come, and how much more remains to be done.

People featured in the collage: 1. Aisyah Ardani 2. Ayushmita Samal 3. Abner Manlapaz 4. Agus Hasan Hidayat 5. Ahmed Hamdy 6. Alberto Vasquez 7. Alexandre Cote 8. Alimata Abdul Karimu 9. Bhanu Priya 10. Catalina Devandas and Stefan Trömel 11. Charles Knox-Vydmanov 12. Diana Samarasan 13. Esma Gumberidze 14. Francisca Valdebenito 15. Fritz Enjhay Cepe 16. Grace Kawala 17. Heather Holmes 18. Jennifer Madans 19. Maria Pereira 20. Meenakshi Balasubramanian 21. Mercoledi Nasiir 22. Mitchell Loeb 23. Monica Pinilla Roncancio 24. Morgon Banks 25. Nanette Goodman 26. Nguyen Thi Lan Anh 27. Nora Groce 28. Polly Meeks 29. Risnawati Utami 30. Samaneh Shabani 31. Sathi Alur 32. Scader Louis 33. Sophie Mitra 34. Sav Tanhchareun 35. Tom Shakeaspere 36. Zachary Morris.

You can now access the full event recording and transcript