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Development of the Disability Rights Movement in USA. Sherrie Brown LSJ/CHID 434 January 14, 2008. Topics for Today. Definitions History continued Discussion of Reading/Questions Next class Country Groups—assignments on Wednesday. What is Disability? models of interpretation.
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Development of the Disability Rights Movement in USA Sherrie Brown LSJ/CHID 434 January 14, 2008
Topics for Today • Definitions • History continued • Discussion of Reading/Questions • Next class • Country Groups—assignments on Wednesday
What is Disability?models ofinterpretation • Moral Model—Disability is a reflection of inner spiritual inferiority and/or divinely inflicted. • Medical Model—Disability is an infirmity that can only be properly addressed by professionals who attempt to cure or fix the person. • Social Pathology Model—Disability is a personality defect that individual must seek to remedy with help of experts. • Civil Rights or Social Model—to be defined…
What is a Civil Right? • Valid, legally recognized claim or entitlement. • Created by government to enforce rights. • Because a civil right is a creation of government – it can be taken away. • Encompasses both freedom from government interference or discriminatory treatment and an entitlement to a benefit or service.
What is a Human Right? • Is a natural right—every person has certain rights simply by being. • Has a moral authority even when it is not written in law. • Is inalienable (not capable of being transferred to another). • What government does not give, government cannot take away.
American Disability Law Development • Historically (currently), disabled individuals pitied, abused, objects of charity, and not afforded the same “bundle” of rights as others. • Lack of power (political, economic, social) created devaluation and dehumanization. • Victimization resulted in increased segregation and self-fulfilling prophecies of dependency. • Development and growth of institutions as way to manage “dirt” aka difference. • Eugenics movement grew and state mandated sterilization became routine.
Beginning of change • After WWI there was growing reaction by people with disabilities and advocates. • Blind veterans formed American Foundation of the Blind. • Parents of children with disabilities developed national advocacy groups—e.g., Children’s Benevolent League (now Arc) • After WWII, other new groups developed--e.g., the Paralyzed Veterans of America.
Revolution • People with disabilities became involved in the civil rights movement for African Americans in 1960s. • Objective was to change society--not the person. • Civil Rights Model as way to interpret disability develops. • Lessons taken from earlier Civil Rights Movement included litigation and legislative advocacy as well as civil disobedience.
Disability Civil Rights Model • Limitations on the full participation of people with disabilities are not natural or foregone outcomes of impairment. • Limitations result directly from characteristics and decisions of society. • Limitations are within the environment--not the individual. • Solution is self-advocacy, systems advocacy, removal of barriers. • Enforcement of rights through legal and political action.
Goals of the Movement • Eradication of perceptions of inferiority and all other irrational cultural labeling. • Elimination of the discrimination that results from such perceptions. • Create equality of opportunity through access to and independence in all aspects of society.
Status of legal rights of individuals with developmental disabilities historically • Institutional settings: • Infringement on fundamental right to liberty (travel, free association, privacy) • Those “committed” often deprived of right to medical treatment, to habilitation, education, autonomy, privacy, sexual expression and even protection from harm.
Status continued: • In community settings: • Usually deprived of “normal” rights including education, ability to contract, to marry, be licensed, buy insurance, to vote and to be free from discrimination in obtaining employment, housing. • In criminal justice system: • Regardless of guilt, often confess, are prey for others during incarceration, etc.
Federal court decisions in 1970s • Mentally retarded persons involuntarily confined to state institution had a constitutional right to habilitation. Wyatt v. Stickney (Alabama 1972) • Humane psychological and physical environment ordered • Individualized habilitation and training plan required. • Qualified professional and paraprofessional staff in sufficient numbers to deliver training required. • Extensive protections ordered to ensure that individuals were afforded basic needs—e.g., adequate food, LRE, transition, minimal physical standards, etc. • Court appointed a “Human Rights Committee” consisting of 7 members, including resident with mental retardation.
Judicial rulings continued: • People with mental retardation have a constitutional right to protection from harm. NY State Association for Retarded Children v. Carey (consent decree 1975) • Willowbrook forbidden from implementing seclusion, corporal punishment, medical experimentation and routine use of restraints. • Decree mandated individual plans for education, therapy, care and development of each child. • Establishment of a Consumer Advisory Committee of parents, community leaders, residents (current and former) to monitor.
Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act • Signed by President Ford in 1975. • Establishes that individuals have a right to appropriate treatment, services, and habilitation. • Public funds will not be spent on institutions that: • Fail to provide treatment, services and habilitation which are appropriate • Fail to meet minimum standards of adequate food, sufficient medical and dental care • Use physical restraints unless absolutely necessary, excessive use of chemical restraints, deny relatives right to visit at reasonable hours without prior notice, or comply with adequate fire and safety standards. • Increased emphasis on deinstitutionalization.
Courts Reflect Changing Attitudes • Justice Marshall in Clebourne (1984) summarized the treatment of people with disabilities: • “a regime of state-mandated segregation and degradation soon emerged that in its virulence and bigotry rivaled, and indeed paralleled, the worst excesses of Jim Crow. Massive custodial institutions were built to warehouse the retarded for life; the aim was to halt reproduction and nearly extinguish their race. Many disabled children were categorically excluded from public schools, based on the false stereotypes that all were uneducable and on the purported need to protect nondisabled children from them. State laws deemed the retarded ‘unfit for citizenship.’” • He concluded that persons with developmental disabilitieshave been subject to a lengthy and tragic history of segregation and discrimination that can only be called “grotesque.”
Deinstitutionalization Movement • Those who support institutions, describe deinstitutionalization as primary cause of homelessness, decline in quality of urban life, and result in profound neglect of helpless/disturbed persons. • Proponents characterize it as end of a system of oppressive, dehumanizing confinement. • Began in mid-1950s and continues today.
Residential Habilitation Centers (RHCs) • Five exist in Washington State. • Less than 1,000 individuals live in RHCs. • Legislature in 2003-5 biennium budget ordered Fircrest to downsize. • Heated debates over pro/con institutions. • Legislature in 2005-7 biennium budget ordered a stop to the downsizing. • Residential Services Study Commission to advise Governor Gregoire formed and disbanded in 2005/6. • Efforts to close institutions in Washington State has been “put on back burner” by advocates because of the political barriers—i.e., strong union.
Major Legislation • Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 • Architectural Barriers Act of 1968 • Rehabilitation Act of 1973 • RCW 49.60--Washington State Law Against Discrimination • Education for all Handicapped Children Act of 1975 • Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act of 1975 (DD Act) • Voting Accessibility for Elderly & Handicapped Act of 1986 • Air Carrier Access Act of 1986 • The Fair Housing Amendments of 1988 • Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990
Laws in a Nutshell • Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 requires systems accepting federal funds be accessible to the elderly and people with disabilities. • Architectural Barriers Act of 1968 requires that all buildings built with federal funds be accessible.
Laws continued… • Rehabilitation Act of 1973: §501, §503, §504 protect persons with disabilities from discrimination in federal government, federally funded programs, by recipients of federal funds. • RCW 49.60 -- Washington State Law Against Discrimination (disability added 1973). • Education for all Handicapped Children Act of 1975 (renamed IDEA in 1990 and IDEIA in 2004) requires free appropriate public education (FAPE) for all qualified children.
Laws continued… • Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act of 1975 provides funding for services, state DD councils, P&A programs and Bill of Rights. • Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and Handicapped Act of 1986 requires all polling places in federal elections be accessible for elderly and people with disabilities. • Air Carrier Access Act of 1986 prohibits discrimination against any otherwise qualified individual with disability, by reason of such disability, in the provision of air transportation.
Laws continued… • Fair Housing Amendment of 1988 provides protection in housing. • Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 protects qualified people with disabilities from discrimination in the areas of employment, transportation, access to public services and facilities, and communication.
Discussion • How are Coastal Center and Willowbrook different? How are they similar? • “The nondisabled world sees powerlessness as the natural product of dependence and dependence as the natural product of our needs.” • What is the government’s responsibility—if any—for individuals like Harriet McBryde Johnson or Bernard Carabello?
Discussion… • What is the Independent Living Movement? • What is/are the Independent Living Centers in Washington?