An established and influential scholar in Disability Studies, Miro’s pioneering research explores young disabled people’s participation in campaigning, advocacy, and disability politics across Europe. This led Miro to outline innovative theoretical insights into disabled people’s experiences of power, resistance, and the pursuit for liberation. His work is widely published across journals, books, and reports.
A disability campaigner from 14, Miro was Chair of the Whizz Kidz Youth Board at 17. He won a UK Millennium Award and worked with Sony PlayStation Europe to develop a computer game promoting disability equality.
Subsequently, he moved into policy and research, becoming one of the youngest UK Government policy advisers, aged 17. Miro was part of the UK delegation at the Signing Ceremony for the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, 2007.
Miro is based at the University of Leeds. He is the Deputy Director of the Centre for Disability Studies, an internationally renowned research centre dedicated to understanding how political, economic, social, and cultural contexts affect disabled people’s life chances.
He is an executive and managing editor of two international journals in Disability Studies, a mentor at the Council for At-Risk Academics, and a project adviser on programmes about archives and history, welfare and social security, counterterrorism, and disability advocacy.
Miro’s academic profile has led to policy positions across Europe. He is an adviser to the Liverpool City Region on fairness and social justice, UK Government on personalisation of health and social care agendas, European Commission on disability hate crime and self-directed support provision, and British Council on inclusivity approaches.
He is a former Disability Advisory Committee member at the UK Equality and Human Rights Commission, and a founding member of the European Network on Independent Living Youth Network.
His pioneering work has been recognised in the Birthday Honours (MBE, 2014), by the Royal Society of Arts (Invited Fellow, 2017), and the International Sociological Association (Sociologist of the Month, September 2022).
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