“Disability-Battling Against Status Quo ”
Challenging the status quo takes commitment, courage, imagination, and, above all, dedication to learning. Marshall Ganz
Throughout history, people with disability have been ignored, hidden and cursed. When made visible, they have been subjects of exhibitions and objects of ridicule. Society has been ‘dealing’ with the ‘problem of people with disability by placing them in institutions or prisons and by sterilising women and girls as an acceptable treatment.
Up until the late 1970s, the views of persons with disability were?mainly filtered through the voices of disability service providers, professionals working in the area of disability and family members. This was also occurring?at the international level.? At the time, the key international disability organisation,?Rehabilitation International, had a policy that while?people with disability could attend its periodic international conference as observers,?they were not permitted to speak.
People with disability strongly protested against this policy at the 1980 conference of?Rehabilitation International, held in Winnipeg, Canada, where a decision was made to establish a new international organisation of and for people with disability. The organisation founded was?Disabled Peoples International, which now has members in over 160 countries throughout the world.
1981 was a turning point into the history of the Australian and international disability rights movements.
Disabled Peoples International held its first World Assembly in Singapore in?the context of the?International Year of?Disabled Persons?(IYDP) which had been declared by the United Nations. During this year,?people with disability?began to think of?themselves more as a public issue?rather than a private problem. The concept of systemic?oppression also emerged as a motive for the development of a social movement in Australia and overseas. While, individuals?and groups?did advocate?for the rights of people with disability before the IYDP, this action was mostly based around a medical diagnostic group or specific?issue.
领英推荐
In 1981, disability became more than a diagnosis and something to be dealt with by medical professionals. People with disability discovered the social nature of their condition and became united in claiming self-determination and self-representation to overcome their social oppression as a group.
In 1986, disability rights advocacy was recognised as a programme area to be funded under the?Disability Services Act 1986 .
Since then,?disability activism and advocacy began?a sustained focus on several important cornerstones of disability self-determination;?a general move?away from institutional type services to community based services; relocation of people with physical disability from hostels and nursing homes into community housing, enlightened mental health legislation in various states, the establishment of ‘public advocates’ and guardianship boards in most states, the?Disability Services Act 1986?(DSA) and the?Disability Discrimination Act 1992?(DDA).
In 2008, the adoption and ratification by the Australian Government of the United Nations Convention for the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) is the?most recent?major advancement of the Australian disability rights movement and in the lives of people with disability.
SOURCE: “HISTORY OF AUSTRALIA’S DISABILITY MOVEMENT”
People With Disability Australia, accessed 4th September 2023.
--
11 个月Melissa Ryan Melissa, Re: " Battling the status quo". My book " Light Sensitive Learners. Unveiling Policy Inaction, Marginalisation, Discrimination" includes a chapter on a few parents and teachers working together to change the status quo. The paper back edition is listed on Amazon, but the ebook has not yet been uploaded. Yes, commitment, courage is required and having an understanding of policymaking helps.
Owner at Info-Empower
11 个月Link to article in first comment: https://www.dhirubhai.net/pulse/disability-battling-against-status-quo-melissa-ryan-xw0vc/ If we haven't connected yet, please connect today!1