ArchivedAcknowledgements for "Developing a Web Accessibility Business Case for Your Organization"
This page is part of an older version of The Business Case for Digital Accessibility and made available here for archival purposes.
The Developing a Web Accessibility Business Case for Your Organization is developed by the Education and Outreach Working Group (EOWG), with input from others.
As part of the WAI-AGE project, it was updated in June 2009 to more thoroughly address the impact of Web accessibility on older users and to reference WCAG 2. WAI-AGE is the Web Accessibility Initiative: Ageing Education and Harmonisation (WAI-AGE) Project, supported by the European Union's 6th Framework Programme (FP6).
Editors, Current and Previous:
- Shawn Lawton Henry, W3C WAI
- Andrew Arch, W3C WAI, and previously while at National Information and Library Services (Vision Australia)
- Judy Brewer, W3C WAI (until 2003)
Contributors:
- Shadi Abou-Zahra, W3C WAI
- R Miguel Bermeo
- Harvey Bingham
- Helle Bjarnø, Videncenter for Synshandicap / Visual Impairment Information Centre
- Ben Caldwell
- Alan Chuter, Fundosa Teleservicios, Fundación ONCE
- Libby Cohen
- Charmane Corcoran
- Sylvie Duchateau, Braillenet
- Alistair Garrison
- Phill Jenkins, IBM Accessibility Center
- Suzette Keith
- Chuck Letourneau
- Natasha Lipkina, Hewlett-Packard
- William Loughborough
- Liam McGee
- Blossom Michaeloff, Wells Fargo
- Isabelle Motte
- Sailesh Panchang, Deque Systems
- Lisa Papas
- Doyle Saylor, Wells Fargo
- Carol Smith
- Henk Snetselaar, Bartimeus Educational Institute for the Blind and Partially Sighted
- Michael Stenitzer
- Justin Thorp
- Mark Urban
- Jack Welsh, Boeing
- Yeliz Yesilada, University of Manchester
- Anna Zhuang, Nokia
Developing a Web Accessibility Business Case for Your Organization replaces the draft of Auxiliary Benefits of Accessible Web Design that was posted in August 2001 and edited by Andrew Arch and Chuck Letourneau.