Accessibility

Accessibility

Phronesis Intelligence is intended to be usable, readable, and navigable for as many readers as practical.

Accessibility is part of the site’s larger commitment to responsible communication, clear structure, human-centered design, and practical wisdom in digital work.

Accessibility Principle

Clear information should be available to more readers, not fewer.

PhronesisIntelligence.com exists to explain books, ideas, resources, and responsible AI-assisted work. That purpose depends on readers being able to access the material.

The site should use clear headings, readable text, meaningful links, predictable navigation, adequate contrast, responsive layout, and content that remains useful across devices and assistive technologies.

Accessibility is not only a technical checklist. It is also a communication discipline: write clearly, structure content logically, make navigation predictable, and avoid unnecessary barriers between the reader and the meaning of the page.

The site will continue to be reviewed and improved as pages, resources, and publication materials develop.

Accessibility Practices

Design and content practices used on the site

The site is organized around reader access, clear structure, and practical usability.

Clear Headings

Pages are structured with headings and sections so readers can scan, navigate, and understand the relationship among ideas.

Readable Language

Technical ideas are explained in plain language where possible without reducing the seriousness of the material.

Meaningful Links

Links are written to describe the destination or action, helping readers understand where the link will take them.

Responsive Layout

Pages are intended to remain usable across desktop, tablet, and mobile screen sizes.

Visual Contrast

Text, buttons, and page sections should use visual contrast that supports readability and navigation.

Ongoing Review

Accessibility should be reviewed as the site grows, especially when new pages, images, links, forms, or resources are added.

Reader Experience

Accessibility supports the purpose of the site.

The Phronesis Intelligence Series asks readers to think carefully about human authority, source discipline, governed intelligence, and local-first AI.

Those topics can become complex. Good accessibility helps readers stay oriented. It gives the page structure, labels, headings, and navigation paths that make the material easier to follow.

Accessibility also supports readers using assistive technologies, keyboard navigation, zoom, mobile devices, screen magnification, high-contrast settings, or other personal reading preferences.

The site should invite readers into serious material rather than placing avoidable barriers in front of them.

View Reader Guides

Reader needs may include:

  • Clear page structure
  • Readable text size
  • Predictable navigation
  • Keyboard-friendly interaction
  • Understandable link text
  • Content that works across devices

Content Accessibility

Accessible content is part of source discipline.

Responsible communication requires more than accurate claims. Readers also need structure, context, definitions, and enough explanation to understand what is being said.

The Phronesis Intelligence site uses glossary entries, reader guides, framework pages, and practice tools to help readers approach difficult material without assuming insider knowledge.

That content strategy supports accessibility by making ideas easier to find, define, revisit, and apply.

Images and Media

Media should support the content without replacing meaning.

Images, diagrams, covers, and visual elements can help readers understand the books and framework, but they should not be the only way important information is communicated.

Where practical, images should include appropriate alternative text or nearby explanatory content. Decorative images should not distract from the reading experience.

Book covers, diagrams, and future visual aids should be reviewed for useful descriptions, appropriate contrast, and reader relevance.

Visual design should reinforce meaning rather than hide it.

Explore the Books

Media review asks:

  • Does the image support the content?
  • Is important information also available as text?
  • Is alternative text needed?
  • Is the image decorative or meaningful?
  • Does contrast support readability?
  • Does the image help the reader?

Accessibility Feedback

Report accessibility barriers

Reader feedback helps identify barriers that may not be visible during ordinary site editing.

When reporting an accessibility issue

Identify the page.

Include the page title, link, or section where the issue appeared.

Describe the barrier.

Explain what made the content difficult to access, read, navigate, or understand.

Share device context.

If relevant, include browser, device, screen size, assistive technology, or zoom level.

Suggest the needed result.

Describe what would make the content easier or possible to use.

Avoid sensitive information.

Do not include private, confidential, or sensitive material in ordinary contact messages.

Provide follow-up information.

Include a way to follow up if a response is needed.


Accessibility goal: Make the content easier to reach, understand, navigate, and use.

Contact

Contact Phronesis Intelligence about accessibility.

If you encounter an accessibility barrier on PhronesisIntelligence.com, please use the Contact page to report the issue.

Reports should include the page, the barrier, and the context needed to understand the issue. The purpose is to make the site more usable and to improve reader access over time.

Accessibility feedback is especially useful when it identifies broken navigation, unreadable text, missing labels, unclear link behavior, difficult contrast, keyboard access problems, or content that does not work well with assistive technology.

The site will continue to improve as the publication hub and resource library mature.

Contact Us

Common barriers to report:

  • Broken or unclear links
  • Text that is difficult to read
  • Navigation problems
  • Keyboard access issues
  • Missing image descriptions
  • Layout problems on a device or browser

Limits

Accessibility is an ongoing practice.

This page describes the accessibility intent and reader-facing practices for PhronesisIntelligence.com.

As the site grows, pages, resources, images, links, forms, and navigation should continue to be reviewed. Accessibility work is iterative, especially on a developing publication and resource site.

If something does not work as expected, feedback helps prioritize correction.

Ongoing review areas

  • Navigation
  • Heading structure
  • Link clarity
  • Color contrast
  • Mobile layout
  • Image descriptions and media support

Continue Exploring

Accessibility supports the whole site.

The books need clear reading paths.

The framework needs clear definitions.

The resources need usable navigation.

The contact path needs enough context for useful feedback.

Accessibility helps practical wisdom reach more readers.

Phronesis Intelligence will continue improving structure, readability, navigation, and reader access across the publication hub.