The 2024 Paris Paralympics has been touted as the most gender- diverse games in history, but the disparity is still evident. The international paralympic committee says a lack of depth is stopping the event from being 50/50, with pathways and accessibility at a grass roots level needing improvement.
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00:00Australian team co-captain Angie Ballard has put the finishing touches on her seventh Paralympic
00:08Games preparation.
00:11This time she's competing in what the International Paralympic Committee has spruced as the most
00:16gender-inclusive Games in history.
00:18Look, I think the IPC is definitely trying and I think sometimes it's a resource problem.
00:25It's definitely, there's a limit to how much can be done.
00:29Athletes are classified into 10 different groups based on their impairments, but not
00:33every classification gets to compete in every event.
00:37The medal events and athlete quotas change with each Paralympics.
00:41Some are added to the program and some are taken away in a process described as the biggest
00:46jigsaw puzzle.
00:47When we decide which medal events are included in the program and the quotas, we look at
00:52each event and we look at the depth of talent in each class.
00:56The Paris Games has doubled the number of female athlete quotas compared to when Angie
01:01debuted at the Sydney Paralympics, but women still make up just 42% of athlete slots and
01:07medal events.
01:09It's a complex challenge that starts at the grassroots level, building up the resources
01:13and the talent pool that can eventually push for 50% representation at the elite level.
01:18For more people to be included we actually have to allow for more people to compete at
01:22a Paralympic Games, and we have to respect the fact that elite sport is about having
01:29time to progress and depth of field so that there's competition.
01:33Is there the depth of talent available to us to ensure that the Games is this wonderful
01:37product that showcases the best of Paralympic sport, and at the moment the crude answer
01:41to that is no.
01:42While Angie might not be competing in the Brisbane 2032 Games, she's hopeful it's an
01:47opportunity to create serious change.
01:50Realistically the abled bodied pathway is not working for a lot of people within para
01:55sport so we need to think outside the box and we need to adjust our system a little
02:00bit to make sure it's including those people whether they become Paralympians or not.
02:03Earlier this year the Australian Government doubled the existing funding allocated to
02:08para sport, investing $55 million over the next two years.
02:13The Australian Institute of Sport has also launched Project Para, which aims to double
02:17the number of para coaches in Australian sport and support current Paralympic coaches
02:22in the lead up to the Brisbane 2032 Games.
02:25It's a step in the right direction for para athletes at all levels.