NADSN RIDE Higher – About us

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A slightly overhead perspective of two disabled Black people (a femme wearing compression gloves and a non-binary person in a power wheelchair) holding hands while on sitting across from each other on a coffee date.

“Driving a journey towards greater equity”

– Dr Melanie Best, Lead of RIDE Higher

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Meet the team
Melanie Best

Dr Melanie Best

Lead of RIDE Higher

University of Wolverhampton

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Mel was instrumental in the conceptualisation of RIDE Higher and now leads the work. She stepped out of a senior academic role to dedicate her time to promoting the inclusion of disabled staff within HE. She now focusses her time on driving forward the work of RIDE Higher, whilst working as a Senior HR Advisor in Equality, Diversity & Inclusion (Disability). Mel leads on the University’s Disability Equality Action Plan with this work helping the University’s DSN to win ‘Outstanding Ability Network’ at the 2025 Employee Network Awards, and ‘Highly Commended’ at the 2025 British Diversity Awards. Mel is also a disability researcher, having focussed research on Paralympic athletes and HE communities. She is part of the NADSN Steering Committee.

Hamied Haroon

Dr Hamied Haroon

NADSN Director Representative

University of Manchester

Chair of NADSN.

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Dr Hamied Haroon is a Research Fellow at The University of Manchester. Hamied is a proud life-long Disabled person, Mancunian, husband, and father of two, and a Muslim of Pakistani heritage. Apart from his “day job”, Hamied is Founder and Chair of the National Association of Disabled Staff Network (NADSN). His profile was included by The Royal Society in a selection of past and present Disabled scientists in 2019. As 2021 began, He delivered the Annual Disability Lecture at the Universities of Cambridge (2018) and Oxford (2021). He served on the Steering Committee for The Royal Society’s new report on “Disability Technology” in 2025. Hamied served as a Judge for the Shaw Trust Disability Power 100 from 2021 to 2024 and the Nature Awards for Inclusive Health Research from 2022 to 2024. In July 2025, Hamied was presented with the first ever Christabel Pankhurst Medal at The University of Manchester President’s Distinguished Achievement Awards.

Emma Nadin

Emma Nadin

Secretary

University of Loughborough

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Emma is Co-Chair of The Disability and Inclusion Network, Neurodiversity Champion, a Neurodiversity Workplace Needs Assessor and NADSN’s East Midlands Regional Lead.

Prof. Gayle Brewer

University of Liverpool

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Gayle is Equality, Diversity, Inclusion, and Wellbeing co-Lead and Athena SWAN Lead for the Institute of Population Health. In 2022 she published Disability in Higher Education: Investigating identity, stigma, and disclosure amongst academics, and was subsequently shortlisted for the British Educational Research Association (BERA) Educational Research Book of the Year. She holds doctorates in Psychology and Education.

Jackie Carter

Prof. Jackie Carter

Independent Consultant

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Jackie is a Professor of statistical literacy and the Academic Lead, EDI Disability. She was named one of the top 100 in the Shaw Trust Powerlist in 2023 (top 10 in the Education category). Jackie is a staunch advocate for disability-inclusion, having introduced the Sunflower lanyard into the University of Manchester and led them to Disability Confident Leader status. She is committed to developing a disability framework that is better suited to Higher Education. She initiated a ‘Let’s Talk Disability’ series of recorded conversations with senior staff, disabled staff and PGRs, at the University.

Dr Francesca (Frankie) Doddato

Lancaster University

She/Her

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Frankie is a teaching assistant in Lancaster University’s Physics Department. She has a PhD in particle cosmology, having built a model on the production of supersymmetric dark matter and the baryon asymmetry. While a PhD student she found a side interest in disability inclusion and EDI. This set her on the path to her joining the Lancashire and Cumbria branch of the Institute of Physics (IOP) in 2017.

On joining the committee, she created the Diversity Representative role; this grew into her national Inclusion and Diversity Advocates initiative, which she leads. In recognition of this, she was awarded the IOP Phillips Award in 2023, for distinguished service to the institute. She has sat on numerous IOP national committees and groups, including the Membership and D&I committees, and has been described as a “shining light” to the IOP on EDI matters.

Her work with the IOP led to her being commissioned to write a book on supporting disabled physicists in universities (still a WIP), which in turn led to her joining NADSN and the STEMM Action Group. As co-leader of the group, she is a co-author of the NADSN White Paper, “Towards a fully inclusive environment for disabled people in STEMM”. She is interested in applying the White Paper’s recommendations to HE and advocating for better inclusion for disabled educators. She joined the RIDE Higher steering committee in January 2026.

Prof Carol Evans smiles at the camera.

Prof. Carol Evans

University of Salford

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Carol is the Pro-Vice Chancellor Education and Student Experience and Professor of Higher Education. She is a global leader in research-informed inclusive practices and pedagogy. She has held many senior leadership positions within higher education including Principal Assessor for England’s Office for Students (OfS), Pro Vice-Chancellor (Learning and Teaching) at Griffith University (Australia), Chair of Higher Education and Academic Lead of HEFi at the University of Birmingham, Professor and Co-Director of Southampton’s Centre for Higher Education, and Board member at the University of Bournemouth. Carol has produced world-leading research in assessment and individual differences and is a strong advocate for disability inclusion for staff and students in higher education. She is a member of the Office of the Independent Adjudicator’s Disability Experts Panel. Working with Transforming Access and Student Outcomes (TASO) and colleagues in the UK and Australia she developed a sector-leading disability inclusion framework and integrated approach to inclusion (IIF). She works closely with the British Council to promote disability inclusion for students.

Angela Getty

Angela Getty

University of Ulster

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Angela has 22 years’ experience as an equality practitioner at Ulster University in a research and management capacity. She is responsible for leading the equality, diversity and inclusion section at Ulster University, ensuring compliance with employment equality legislation and delivery of statutory equality reports.

Angela is currently Chair of the Board of Employers for Disability Northern Ireland and is the main contact between the University and the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland.

Dan Goodley

Prof. Dan Goodley

University of Sheffield

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Professor of Disability Studies and Education and co-director of iHuman. Dan’s research seeks to theorise and contest the processes of disablism and ableism. He works in collaboration with disabled researchers and disabled people’s organisations. Two current projects include the Wellcome Anti-Ableist Research Culture and Disability Matters, both funded by the Wellcome Trust, which position disability as the driving subject for rethinking universities, research and practice.

Elisabeth Griffiths smiles at the camera.

Dr Elisabeth Griffiths

Northumbria University

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Elisabeth is an Associate Professor and a qualified Solicitor (non-practising) specialising in Employment and Equality Law. Elisabeth’s research interests are equality law and disability discrimination in the workplace, in education and as a lived experience. She has written about ableism in academia and the lived experience of disability for law students.

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Julian Gwinnett

University of Wolverhampton

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Julian is a Disability and Inclusion Advisor within the directorate of Student Life. He has worked in the HE Sector for over 25 years. He is also a Co-Chair of the University of Wolverhampton’s Disabled Staff Network (DSN). He a tireless advocate for disabled people. He is also a cohost of the D.I.I.verse Hub – a podcast channel that explore a range of topics under the umbrella of Diversity, Inclusion & Intersectionality.

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Rachel Heyes

University of Manchester

She/Her

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Rachel is a Learning Technologist in the Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health at the University of Manchester. She works with staff and students to design accessible, engaging, and inclusive digital learning experiences, drawing on her background in teaching, content design, and accessibility practice.

Rachel brings both lived experience and professional expertise to her work in equity, diversity, and inclusion. She is a former Co-Chair of the Disabled Staff Network at the University of Manchester and contributes nationally through NADSN as Engagement and Communications Lead, the Disabled Leaders Network (DLN), and Diversity in Medicine and Health Group (DIMAH). She is also involved in various University of Manchester EDI committees and consultations, helping to shape policies and practices that support disabled and neurodivergent staff and students.

With a background in film and A-level Media Studies, Rachel brings creativity to her work. She works from home alongside her much-loved pets and is passionate about art, crafts, reading, accessible Pilates, and being the best ally she can be in working towards disability equity and amplifying under-represented voices.

Alan Humphries

Alan Humphries

University of Coventry

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Alan works as an Advice Caseworker at the Your SU Advice Service at the Students’ Union at Coventry University. He has worked in the HE Sector for 13 years. Before that he worked in Local Government and briefly as a Solicitor. He was a keen disability activist and can remember chaining himself to buses to make the case for equality as well as attending countless marches and demonstrations!

Pip Jackson

Pip Jackson

University College London

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Pip has worked across the university providing in-house expertise on inclusive design and access, and embedding inclusive environments in to their education programme. She sits on a number of industry led committees and panels, including the British Standards Institutions’ B559 committee which is responsible for BS8300 Design of an accessible and inclusive built environment. Pip has over twenty years’ experience of working on access and inclusion in the public sector, in both planning (working on strategic planning applications for the Mayor of London as principal advisor- access) and building control settings (Camden Council). Pip was the National President of the Access Association.

Louise Pepper-Kernot

Louise Pepper-Kernot

University of Manchester

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Louise has been a Disability Practitioner in Higher Education since 2002 and served on the Board of Directors at the National Association of Disability Practitioners from 2022 to 2025. Louise was the founder of the Staff Disability Service at the University of Manchester in 2009. She has also managed Disability and Disabled Students’ Allowances Assessment Centre Services. Currently, Louise is the Head of Disability Services at the University of Manchester. In this role, she leads a team of Disability Advisers that supports both staff and students, a Specialist Mental Health and Autism Mentoring team, as well as a group of students employed to provide direct transition, note-taking, and engagement support to disabled students. As an individual with experience as a disabled undergraduate, postgraduate, and staff member, Louise brings invaluable lived experience to her work. She is deeply passionate about enhancing inclusion and raising awareness of the challenges faced by disabled colleagues and students in Higher Education, leading to improved experiences.

Geoff

Prof. Geoff Layer

University of Coventry

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Geoff works on strategic development for Coventry University as the Vice Chancellor’s Envoy. He has worked at Sheffield Hallam University, been Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academic) at the University of Bradford and became the longest standing Vice Chancellor at the University of Wolverhampton. He has been a Professor of Lifelong Learning since 1995, with numerous research projects, publications and sector leading developments. He was a board member of AdvanceHE, Chair of the Advance HE EDI Committee and led the Disabled Student Sector Leadership Group. In 2019 the Universities Minister appointed him as Chair of the newly formed Disabled Student Commission and in 2021 he was appointed the Disability Ambassador for Universities.

Lucinda

Lucinda Matthews-Jones

Liverpool John Moores University

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Lucie is a Reader (Associate Professor) in Victorian History. She is the project lead on LJMU’s Disabled Researchers Hub, funded through the Research England’s ‘Enhancing Research Culture’ initiative. She regularly talks to higher education practitioners on inclusive research culture and working with and for disabled researchers including PGRs and academic staff. She is on the advisory board of History UK’s Disability and History Project. She is also an equity champion for the EDI Caucus.

Prof. Stuart Prior

University of Bristol

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Stuart Prior is Professor of Archaeological Practice, Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and Member of the Chartered Institute for Archaeologists (MCIfA). He is also a broadcaster specialising in heritage, castles, landscapes and ancient technology. He is Co-Chair of the Disabled and Well-being Network (DAWN) at University of Bristol and has a student facing role as School Disability Officer in the School of Arts.

Sue Wilbraham

Dr Sue Wilbraham

University of Cumbria

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Sue is a Senior Lecturer in Applied Psychology at the University of Cumbria. She is also a Chartered Psychologist and Senior Fellow of the HEA, a Schwartz round facilitator and an advocate for creating compassionate workplace communities. With expertise in wellbeing within HE, Sue

contributed to the development of the University Mental Health Charter. She is passionate about understanding the way the environment impacts people and is also UCU green rep for the University. Sue represents the Disabled and Neurodiverse staff network (DANN) on the University’s EDI and Wellbeing committee.

Meredith

Dr Meredith Wilkinson

De Montford University

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Dr Meredith Wilkinson is a Senior Lecturer in Psychology at De Montfort University. She is co-chair of the DMU DisAbility and Wellbeing Network and is the chair of the Disabled Women in Academia Group which is a sub-group of the National Association of Disabled Staff Networks (NADSN).

Anica Zeyen

Prof. Anica Zeyen

Royal Holloway, London

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Professor in Entrepreneurship and Inclusion in the School of Business and Management. Anica chairs the Disability and Mental Health Staff Network and serves as Vice Dean for Equality, Diversity and Inclusion for her School. She actively drives university-wide initiatives to foster more inclusive practices and policies, focusses her research on disability-inclusive workplaces/ entrepreneurship and leisure activities. Anica is a disability rights advocate and campaigns with local and national disability rights organisations as well as giving talks on sight loss awareness, guide dogs and disability awareness.

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