I’m commissioning a series of well-researched, reader-friendly pieces that explain disability-related topics to the general public. The goal is to replace myths with facts, highlight everyday accessibility barriers, and showcase inclusive best practices in clear, engaging language. Scope • 5–7 long-form articles (≈1,000 words each) organised as an evergreen resource library. • A concise FAQ sheet that distils key takeaways for quick sharing. • Captivating headlines and meta descriptions optimised for search. What I’m after • Written content only—although I may add visual or audio elements later, your focus is the narrative. • Informational tone that educates without lecturing; plain-language style that remains respectful and people-first. • Content grounded in credible sources, legislation (e.g., ADA, Equality Act), and current accessibility standards. • Sensitivity to diverse experiences: disability is not monolithic. • Smooth collaboration via Google Docs or similar, with two revision rounds for polish. Ideal background You’re a skilled copywriter or journalist familiar with disability studies, social policy, or health communication. First-hand lived experience or prior work with disability communities is a strong plus. Deliverables are considered complete when every article passes a plagiarism check, adheres to inclusive language guidelines, and is formatted for web readability (sub-headings, bullet points, short paragraphs). If you can bring clarity, empathy, and authority to this subject, I’d love to read your proposal and a relevant writing sample.