Recognize Canada's missing millions
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Recognize Canada's missing millions
The Toronto Star , Oct. 24, 2009
missing? Did they just drop off the map? Did anybody organize a search
party?
give any thought at all to people with disabilities when formulating and
assessing policies. He found little beyond empty words.
level. Charitable platitudes from the corporate sector.
relegated to the farthest margins. When it comes to real, substantive
inclusion in policy-making decisions, they are simply missing.
it all in his latest book, Absent Citizens: Disability Politics and Policy
in Canada (University of Toronto Press). It is a bleak picture of policy
failure that translates into exclusion from workplaces and community
involvement.
twice as likely to live in poverty as those without disabilities. More than
two million lack one or more of the supports they need for daily living.
More than half of children with disabilities do not have access to the aids
and devices they need.
disablement into social structures and social programs," Prince points out.
determined to shed light where it belongs. They are putting to rest old
notions of the disabled as sick, tragic figures struggling heroically to
overcome their shortcomings.
point out. Slowly but surely, they are influencing legislation and
empowering others. But there's a lot of work to be done.
Canada, social scientists naturalize disability-based inequities," Prince
notes.
the role played by a political system, and a society, that constructs
physical and attitudinal barriers rather than dismantling them?
physical and intellectual structures accessible to anyone who moves, or
communicates, or processes information differently from the majority?
labelled 'unemployable,' public programs should relate to clients as
individuals, as participants with identifiable skills who desire
independence and often work," Prince says.
measures to promote training and skills development, employment and
volunteer opportunities."
administration, " Prince argues. We need to build national statistics and an
"inclusion index." We need budget statements that commit to improving lives
for disabled people, and we need the media to report on the implications of
budgets and other policies for people with disabilities and their families.
would lead the way to a more level playing field in the job market. But
progress under federal employment equity legislation has stalled, Prince
argues. As has progress toward a federal disability law.
to anti-discrimination legislation that forces disability activists into the
courts to fight prejudicial practices one barrier at a time.
political stripe, would be a good start to positive action. But, so far,
nothing has materialized.
Harper government - as it likes to refer to itself - is "vague, somewhat
muddled and incomplete," Prince argues.
community needs to engage in that process," he points out.
Ryerson University. Her column appears Saturdays. helenhenderson @
sympatico.ca
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1 Comments:
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By sign, At September 7, 2011 at 9:31 PM
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