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UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. Lessons to be learned for the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Goal of Workshop. UNCRC – what was successful and why? UNCRC – what was unsuccessful and why? What are the recommendations for the implementation of the UNCRPD?
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UN Convention on the Rights of the Child Lessons to be learned for the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
Goal of Workshop • UNCRC – what was successful and why? • UNCRC – what was unsuccessful and why? • What are the recommendations for the implementation of the UNCRPD? • What is one thing you would change if you could, relating to implementation?
UNCRC – Key Facts • Origins: Declaration on the Rights of the Child drafted 1923 by Eglantyne Jebb, founder of Save the Children • 1979 International year of the child • 1989: UNCRC adopted by UN • NGO involvement strong , but not DPO • 1991: monitoring Committee on the Rights of the Child established
UNCRC - content • Covers whole spectrum of rights: civil, political, economic, social and cultural • First human rights treaty to specifically mention disability, Articles 2 and 23 • General principles: • Article 3: Best Interests of the Child • Article 12: Participation • Article 2: Non-discrimination • Article 6: Survival and Development
UNCRC: Disabled Children • Article 23: good that it drew attention to disabled children, and obligates Committee and States • Article 23: bad in that it • reinforced disability and medical/health issue • Refers to special needs but not basic needs • Talks of provisions being subject to available resources • Seems to assume special provision rather than inclusion
UNCRC:1997 CRC theme day • Shifted agenda from Article 23 to the general principles (Articles 2,3, 6,12.) • Creation of Working Group: Rights for Disabled Children. Consisting of DPOs and Child Rights agencies • Disabled children’s self advocacy: two disabled young persons from South Africa made the opening address
CRC Disability Day: what then? • Analysis of Government reports and feedback to Committee (CRC) • Improved scrutiny by CRC • Recommendation to draft a General Comment (realised in 2006) • Research into violations and good practice by SC Alliance and DAA • Increased self-advocacy of disabled children
It is Our World Too! A Report on the Lives of Disabled Children Rights for Disabled Children 2001 Disabled Children’s Rights – A Practical Guide. Save the Children Alliance 2001 Publications on Disabled Children’s Rights – good practice and abuses
UNCRC: Issues related to Violations • Major gaps in evidence: Disabled children and sexual abuse, child labour, conflict situations, juvenile justice, drug abuse, family reunification. • Invisibility: violations not noticed/seen as important or relevant to disabled children • Indivisibility of rights: some examples of ‘good practice’ violate other rights • Some impairment groups more invisible than others
UNCRC Violations: examples • Discrimination (Art 2): • Direct: different laws for disabled children. • In-direct discrimination; neglect, inaction • Absence or non-implementation of policy • Multiple discrimination – disabled+refugee – slip between both nets • Equal rights does not mean equal treatment. Art 23 should be to enable other rights to be accessed.
Violations: continued • Survival and Development (Art 6): belief that disabled children do not have same right to life – kinder to ‘let them die’. Poverty = more threatening to life/development of DC • Best Interests (Art 3): different standards for DCs; ‘OK’ to send them away from families, ‘OK’ to subject them to painful treatment • Participation (Art 12): • DCs not seen as actors in their own lives. • Children who need alternative communication methods • Discrimination against children with learning disability
UNCRC: Violations summary • Neglect, abuse, abandonment and killing tolerated • Institutional, parental, professional and peer abuse tolerated • Forced segregation, exclusion and marginalisation in education • Higher rates of sexual abuse • Increased vulnerability in conflict, emergency, refugee situations and in relation to HIV/AIDs
UNCRC: Good practice • Disaggregation of data: gender, age and disability • Non-discrimination policy and practice • Shift from charity/medical to rights based • Participation: need for self-advocacy • Comprehensive, rights-based programmes
Good Practice (cont) • Self-advocacy and listening to disabled children • Support, information for families/communities • Inclusive education • Accessible environments and communication • De-institutionalisation • Collaboration between DPS and NGOs
Things to change: • Article 23: wording and exclusive focus • Collaboration between Child Rights NGOs and Disabled Peoples Organisations (all impairments) • Disabled Child Self Advocacy • Disaggregated data collection • Pro-active addressing gaps in information
General Comment 2006 CRC/C/GC/9 • Poverty and disability highlighted • Serious barriers to full enjoyment of rights not the disability itself but social, cultural, attitudinal and physical barriers • Specific recommendations to States to combat discrimination • Promotes inclusion into society (16) • Highlights importance of allocating resources (22) • Highlights violations of right to life
General Comment (cont) • Views of the child: highlights involvement in decision making and full participation • Civil rights spelt out – birth registration, access to communication technologies, accessible transport • Concerns around abuse and institutionalisation • Sites Inclusive Education as the ultimate goal
Disabled Children lobbying in New York January 2006 Representatives from Bangladesh, China and UK
Lobbying in the UN, January 2006 I am very happy to raise issues related to the disable children. It is nice for me to say some thing in front of global community. Nazma (Bangladesh