Disability Rights are Human Rights
Update: 2023-07-05
Description
This July marks 33 years since the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was signed — a landmark law that prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities in several areas, including employment, transportation, communications, and government resources. The ADA is meant to protect people with disabilities from discrimination in everyday life, and the law’s signing made the US the first country in the world to adopt a declaration of equality for persons with disabilities. The legacy of the ADA has included increased activism and policy gains for persons with disabilities worldwide.
In this episode of Big World, SIS and Kogod professor Derrick Cogburn joins us to discuss the ongoing legacy of the ADA (2:12 ), noting that disability policy was once a bipartisan issue in the United States but is no longer. He also describes disability policy as emanating from three imperatives: moral, economic, and legal (4:37 ).
Cogburn explains the importance of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) (6:28 ), explaining that the US is not among the more than 180 countries who have ratified the convention, despite then-President Barack Obama signing the CRPD (8:28 ). He also describes global disability movements (9:42 ) and discusses frameworks like the New Urban Agenda, the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and the Sendai Framework, all of which incorporate disability policy.
What are some policy shifts in the realm of online accessibility over the last decade (20:23 )? What are the ramifications of untapped potential when spaces, either physical or online, are not accessible to people with disabilities (29:32 )? Cogburn answers these questions and discusses shifts in activists’ approach to creating disability policy goals in recent years. The podcast concludes with Cogburn’s comments about how the inclusion of persons with disabilities can have many positive impacts on our world (33:29 ).
During our “Take Five” segment, Cogburn shares the five disability policies he would want to see instituted globally (16:39 ).
In this episode of Big World, SIS and Kogod professor Derrick Cogburn joins us to discuss the ongoing legacy of the ADA (2:12 ), noting that disability policy was once a bipartisan issue in the United States but is no longer. He also describes disability policy as emanating from three imperatives: moral, economic, and legal (4:37 ).
Cogburn explains the importance of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) (6:28 ), explaining that the US is not among the more than 180 countries who have ratified the convention, despite then-President Barack Obama signing the CRPD (8:28 ). He also describes global disability movements (9:42 ) and discusses frameworks like the New Urban Agenda, the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and the Sendai Framework, all of which incorporate disability policy.
What are some policy shifts in the realm of online accessibility over the last decade (20:23 )? What are the ramifications of untapped potential when spaces, either physical or online, are not accessible to people with disabilities (29:32 )? Cogburn answers these questions and discusses shifts in activists’ approach to creating disability policy goals in recent years. The podcast concludes with Cogburn’s comments about how the inclusion of persons with disabilities can have many positive impacts on our world (33:29 ).
During our “Take Five” segment, Cogburn shares the five disability policies he would want to see instituted globally (16:39 ).
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