About The D*List
Welcome to The D*List - a new home for disability culture in Aotearoa. Learn more about who we are, why we exist, and how we collaborate with people across our communities to create positive change together.
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What is The D*List?
Throughout 2021, Te Kāhui Tika Tangata - NZ Human Rights Commission and creative agency Curative undertook an in-depth co-design process (Project Mobilise) exploring the attitudes that currently exist towards disability across Aotearoa, building relationships with over 200 disabled and nondisabled people along the way.
From that emerged The D*List, an independent and disability-led social change movement. We are reclaiming our space and narratives through authentic storytelling and community events that build relationships and solidarity.
We created this space for you.
You are welcome here. Every part of you.
The parts that can sometimes feel too disabled. The parts that might not feel disabled enough.
We ask nothing of you other than to simply exist as your full and unapologetic self.
Image description: Some of The D*List kaimahi. L-R: Joegen Daniels, Soph Jackson, Eda Tang, Ella Sargison, Will Sangster, Olivia Shivas, Von Ridgley, Red Nicholson and Mili Ghosh.
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Our team
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Red Nicholson
Executive Director
Red Nicholson (he/him) is a long-suffering Warriors fan, recovering high school teacher, and proud disabled person. With a background in the education and creative sectors, Red’s work is driven by a vision for an equitable Aotearoa, underpinned by Te Tiriti, where all people are valued and resourced to live extraordinary lives. As Executive Director at The D*List, his role is to support our team to ensure that everything we do is aligned with our values, goals and aspirations. Red, his wife and his three children live in Tāmaki Makaurau.

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Olivia Shivas
Editor
Olivia Shivas (she/her) has worked in the media industry for a decade, both in the disability sector and in the mainstream media. As Editor, her job is to write, commission and curate content for The D*List. Olivia has Malaysian and Scottish roots and lives with muscular dystrophy. She is passionate about authentic storytelling, bringing disability rights to life, perfecting her combos at boxing class and creating excellent gingerbread houses.

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Ella Sargison
Community Hub Manager
Kia ora koutou,
Ko Ngāti Tūwharetoa te iwi
Ko Ella tōku ingoa
Ko she/her tōku tūkapi
He tangata whaikaha, he tangata kahukura hoki ahauI grew up in Tāmaki Makaurau and have lived in the UK. I now live in South Auckland with my partner, our children and dog. Before arriving at The D*List I have been working in Rainbow spaces, I am also an Auckland Council Rainbow Panel member and run peer support sessions for short statured people in Aotearoa. I am SO excited to be a part of this kaupapa, reach out any time!

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Soph Jackson
Communications Manager
Soph (they/them) was born and raised in south Tāmaki Makaurau, and most of their mahi has been in advocacy spaces with a focus on mental health and wellbeing. Soph is passionate about the power of storytelling as a community-building opportunity. They love swimming in the moana, re-watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and reading. Soph has (possibly) Aotearoa's largest collection of different editions of Pride and Prejudice.

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William Sangster
Editorial Producer
I’m Will (he/him), an editorial producer at The D*List. I’m Tongan and European, and I have cerebral palsy, but I’m also a passionate filmmaker and storyteller. My experience in the disability community has fuelled my love for sharing people's stories through both written and visual mediums. I’m a laid-back guy who enjoys making people laugh and helping them feel valued in any setting. A quote I strive to live by comes from my favourite movie, Back to the Future: “If you put your mind to it, you can achieve anything.”

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Eda Tang
Editorial Producer
唐子遥 Eda Tang (Ngāi Haina, she/her) is a storyteller based in Tāmaki Makaurau. Her role at the D*List is to use media to mirror the experiences of disabled people, amplify community voices and energise readers. Her work as a writer has featured on The Spinoff and Ensemble magazine and she was previously a Pou Tiaki journalist at Stuff reporting on local and national news related to te ao Māori, health, culture, language and education. While completing her BA Honours at the University Auckland, she was the co-editor of Craccum, the university's student magazine.

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Joegen Daniels
Editorial Producer
He mokopuna tēnei nō Ngāti Rangiwahitu, nō Ngaati Tiipaa, nō Te Ākitai-Waiohua, nō Ngā Pōtiki hoki. Ko Joegen ahau.
Joegen Daniels (he/him) is a creative generalist, tenured over-thinker and staunch advocate for South Auckland garages. He tells stories by drawing on independent and industry experience across film, TV, music and communications. Joegen believes that Indigenous, POC, queer and disabled storytelling is a key instrument in deconstructing outdated norms and elevating culture.

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Von Ridgley
Operations Coordinator
Von Ridgley (Ngāi Tahu; they/them) is the Operations Coordinator here at The D*List. They came in with unbridled energy and won’t stop asking to be given more tasks, making them a perfect fit for the role. Outside of The D*List, they are a textile artist, a support worker, a club rat, a beach frequenter, and a massive extrovert. They love using their creativity to help others, but also prioritise fun. Von has taught embroidery classes at Studio One Toi Tū since 2018, and has been spotted selling their creations at many markets over the years. They are passionate about community building, mental health advocacy, activism and emporiums.

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Mili Ghosh
Designer and social media manager
Ko Mili Ghosh tōku ingoa! I am a designer. I do a bunch of different kind of creative immersive digital experiences from graphic design to 3D environments, music videos, game experiences and modelling. I'm really passionate about creating meaningful digital experiences whether that be through virtual environments or graphic and illustration. I have many many hobbies (hyperfixations). I play bass in two bands here in Te Whanganui-a-Tara, and I also am a silversmith that makes handmade rings! I have always found myself exploring different facets of myself whether it be my disability, my way of living, my culture and my identity - which I think is why I’m so connected the digital space.

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Henrietta Bollinger
Grants and partnerships lead
Henrietta Bollinger (they/them) has been writing seriously for page and performance since 2009 - and less seriously before that. Their most recent publication was the 2022 best-practice guide Working Together: Accessibility in Aotearoa Theatre co-authored with theatre producer Nathan Mudge and published by Playmarket in collaboration with Arts Access Aotearoa. In 2023 first book Articulations will be published by Tender Press and is a collection of personal essays about disabled life. They live in Wellington.

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A huge thanks to Cole Eastham-Farrelly for the beautiful photos of our kaimahi.
Image Description: The words Motuhake and Whaikaha sit on blocks of red, white and black alongside a poutama pattern, and a tohuwhetū, streaking along the bottom leaving a trail of purple.
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Honouring Te Tiriti
Our co-design process in 2021 was led by a tāngata whaikaha leadership rōpū of disabled Māori leaders, supported by Ahi Kaa whānau at Te Kāhui Tika Tangata - NZ Human Rights Commission.
Moving forward, for The D*List to serve and benefit tāngata whaikaha Māori, we are committed to honouring Te Tiriti. The values common to Māori and disabled people are explicit in Te Tiriti o Waitangi, making Te Tiriti a solid foundation to guide our mahi.
We believe:
- The most important connection between people is whakapapa.
- Disabled Māori are Māori.
- A Māori way of working is based on Māori values.
- Disability culture has its own values too, and we need to incorporate those shared values.
- Te Tiriti o Waitangi is the foundation for bicultural development - mandating the partnership between Māori and all other cultures - including disability culture.
- Bi-cultural development is when two cultures make decisions to live together and work in partnership as much as possible. In Aotearoa, this means Māori as tāngata whenua will always be one of the partners.
- "Māori should be able to live their lives as Māori" - Mason Durie.
This is realised through supporting disabled Māori to gain access and be resourced to participate on an equal basis as others within their own whānau, hapū and iwi so they can live fully as Māori.
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Funding
The D*List is a registered charitable trust (CC60975). We are delighted to have the support of a collective of philanthropic trusts, including:
- Foundation North
- JR Mckenzie Trust
- Todd Foundation
- Spectrum Foundation
These organisations are providing us with the resources to bring our content, events and experiences to life; because we believe that change first starts with us. The conversations we have, the stories we tell, and the spaces we create for ourselves and each other. The D*List trustees are: Elizabeth Goodwin, Matt Frost, Eddy Royal, Donna McCaskill, Erin Gough and Dr Robbie Francis Watene.
We will change how others see us, by changing the stories we tell about ourselves.