How can you use this website?
This website is run by the University of Warwick. We want as many people as possible to be able to use this website.
On this website, you should be able to:
- change colours, contrast levels and fonts
- zoom in up to 300% without the text spilling off the screen
- navigate the website using just a keyboard, you can use links to skip over the navigation and get to content quicker
- navigate the website using speech recognition software
- listen to most of the website using a screen reader (including the most recent versions of JAWS, NVDA and VoiceOver)
- view the website on a tablet or mobile device in either orientation
This website is designed for a broad public audience so we aim to make the website text as simple as possible to understand.
If you have a disability then AbilityNet has advice on making your device easier to use.
How accessible is this website?
We know some pages of this website aren't fully accessible:
- Some web pages may have colour or contrast issues. We are in the process of making changes.
What should you do if you can't access or are having difficulty using this website?
We’re always looking to improve the accessibility of this website. Please contact us if you have any problems. It helps if you can be specific and detailed, if there are things you like and find useful, it would be great to hear about them. To report accessibility problems or ask about anything to do with accessibility use the contact details below.
Contact Us:
Email: digitalhumanities@warwick.ac.uk
Call: 024 765 73737 and ask to log your call for the eResearch team.
When you contact us by email or phone there is a process in place that will acknowledge your contact, tell you who is dealing with it and give you a timescale by which you can expect a reply. Once you have reported a problem with our website or asked for an alternative format, but you are not happy with our response, you can use our complaints process to register your difficulty; this helps us improve our systems.
Complaints
If you are unhappy with the response you receive having contacted us using the details above, you can make a formal complaint to the University using our procedure for Feedback and Complaints.
Enforcement procedure
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) is responsible for enforcing the accessibility regulations. If you’re not happy with how we respond to your complaint, contact the Equality Advisory and Support Service (EASS).
Technical information about this website's accessibility
The University of Warwick is committed to making this website accessible, in accordance with the Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility Regulations 2018.
This service is partially compliant with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines version 2.1 AA standard, due to the non-compliances listed below.
Non-accessible content
We are working to meet the compliance as specified in The Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility Regulations 2018. Meanwhile, the content listed below is non-accessible for the following reasons.
Non-compliance with the accessibility regulations
Issues with technology
The vast majority of our website works correctly on any web technology – we have built this website using open source software that has given consideration to accessibility as a core requirement of the technical platform, however some of the ways we have implemented and customised this software may alter its accessibility.
Drupal Accessibility Statement https://www.drupal.org/about/features/accessibility
For security reasons, we only support TLS 1.2 and higher security protocols, and this means that some older Web Browser will not show the site.
How do we test this website?
eResearch, the IT Services team responsible for publishing and maintaining this website test the customisations to these platforms that we make against the web browsers we support and we test our website infrastructure in these browsers as a minimum along with tablets and mobile devices too at the point of design.
For sites released since September 2019 we have a checklist that includes accessibility before we release a new site, or make significant changes. We use the Google Chrome Lighthouse tool for web developers and manually test against the accessibility objectives covered in this statement.
What we are doing to improve accessibility?
Our first priority is to ensure that accessibility is core to current and future work developed by the eResearch team by design, and where we work with academic colleagues who use this website to publish material, giving them tools and guidance on how to do so in an accessible way.
In addition, through our ongoing commitment to maintaining completed web outputs for past research, we will keep the core open source software patched and inherit any accessibility improvements made to these underlying platforms. We will also be auditing and testing our older websites to update and make our accessibility statements more informative and where we can reasonably make changes to our systems to make them more accessible, we will plan to make those changes.