CID Disability - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 86
About This Presentation
Title:

CID Disability

Description:

... treatment on the non-functioning component of the mind/body to restore to normal' ... Photo: K Thompson, cbm Australia ... Photo: cbm SEAPRO ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:91
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 87
Provided by: helen103
Category:
Tags: cid | disability

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CID Disability


1
CID Disability Inclusive Development Workshop
  • Kirsty Thompson (CBM Australia)
  • Robert Choy (CBM New Zealand)
  • kthompson_at_cbm.org.au rchoy_at_cbmi.org.nz

2
Objective of session
  • Participants will have an understanding of key
    elements of disability inclusive development
    practice and can articulate plans on how to
    relate this to their organisation and role.
  • Partnerships
  • Program cycle
  • Conversations with partners, etc.
  • Ultimately to get you to ask the question to
    start to take some (more) action for inclusion

3
Outline of session
4
INTRODUCTION
  • Who are you?
  • What do you want to get from this?
  • What is your previous experience in disability?

5
Courtesy of WHO
6
Photos cbm SEAPRO
7
So what is the situation for people with a
disability in developing countries?
8
More than 650 million, or 10 of the worlds
population have a disability. 20 of
population are effected when families are taken
into account (ADB, 2002)
9
Care-giving falls disproportionately on women and
girls, resulting in even fewer opportunities for
them to gain employment or complete schooling.
(S.Miles, 1999)
10
Only 1-2 of persons with disabilities in
developing countries receive an
education (UNESCO, 1998)
11
  • Only 1-2 of people with a disability in low
    income communities receive the rehabilitative
    services they need
  • (May- Teerink, World Bank, 1999).

12
Almost half of the children who go blind will die
within two years of losing their sight (CBMI,
2006)
13
As many as 20 million women per year suffer
disability long term complications as a result
of pregnancy childbirth (UNFPA).
14
Mortality of children with disabilities can be as
high as 80 even in countries where overall
under-five mortality rate is below 20. (DFID).
15
For every child killed in war, three are
permanently disabled (UNICEF).
16
At least 10m children worldwide have been
traumatised by armed conflict. (UNICEF)
17
Women and girls with disabilities are twice to
three times more likely to be victims of physical
and sexual abuse. (DFID).
18
People with a disability are often overlooked in
emergency/ humanitarian responses
19
Poor people are disproportionately disabled
and people with disabilities are
disproportionately poor. (Holzmann, R. World
Bank.)
20
Disability Poverty Cycle
Make Development Inclusive Concepts and Guiding
Principles (2008) DG Employment and Social
Affairs, European Commission
21
Understanding Disability
22
Cultural understanding of disability
  • ACTIVITY- cultural understanding
  • List down on the cards you have some common
    beliefs, assumptions, values, about disability
    and persons with disabilities in your country or
    those where you work
  • Now take to the walls.
  • - with your cards
  • - with the photos

23
Intro to models of disability
  • Important to recognise the different ways of
    understanding disability and the possible
    strengths and challenges of each
  • Medical, social, economic, charity, economic
  • Rights based
  • You may align yourself with a particular
    approach, but important to recognise how others
    might understand as a basis for interaction and
    planning

24
Medical model
  • A sick/disabled person has one or more parts of
    the mind or body that need to be fixed to be
    healthy.
  • Focus treatment on the non-functioning component
    of the mind/body to restore to normal
  • Practitioners as experts in charge and
    directing service
  • Clients expected to seek help, follow orders
    and get well.
  • May involve community or institution based
    services
  • Disability is therefore an individual health issue

25
Charity Model
  • Disability non-health
  • People are afflicted with their disability
  • Rationale for intervention since people cannot
    be cured, continuous and protective care is
    provided.
  • Approach can be paternalistic
  • Expecting little from person with a disability
    except that they accept the help that is provided
    without query or challenge.
  • Societys responsibility to ensure their needs
    are met.

26
Economic Model of Disability
  • Often employed by governments
  • Equates value to society with productivity.
    Disability can strain society due to decreased
    productivity.
  • Interventions minimise the impacts of
    non-productivity and the financial support
    required for people with a disability and their
    carers
  • Practitioners provide economic, legislative and
    program support to maintain people in society
    whilst clients are expected to participate in
    programs and accept financial support.
  • Society pays for the financial support and
    programs via taxation and abides by legislation

27
Social Model of Disability
  • Disability
  • Focuse on discrimination and social exclusion.
  • Does not ignore impairments but refocus to
    include social barriers/discrimination
  • Disability as inability of society to accommodate
    all its members.
  • Leads to fundamentally different policy and
    intervention priorities ? removal of disabling
    barriers and emphasis on human and civil rights.

28
Human Rights Model
  • Focus on equal rights for every person
  • See persons with disabilities as holders of equal
    rights
  • See materials on the UN Convention on the Rights
    of Persons with disabilities

29
Feedback from the walls
  • Are all the words and pictures on the right
    walls?
  • Was this easy?
  • In the afternoon we will look at how to tie this
    into our communication strategy for different
    audiences.

30
Some intentional and critical reflection on
  • Our own assumptions and beliefs about people with
    a disability
  • If/How our programs and activities address the
    assumptions, beliefs, and practices of others?
  • How do we address issue of impairment, disability
    and rights?

31
Inclusive development principles and practice
32
Inclusive Development
  • Is about inclusion but what do we mean by this?
  • Is about development but what do we mean by
    this?
  • Is both a process and a goal
  • Follows a twin track approach

33
(No Transcript)
34
Rights based CRPD
  • 'The disability perspective of development is
    based on a concept which defines equality for
    persons with disabilities on an equal basis with
    society as a whole. This view contributes to the
    empowerment and participation of persons with
    disabilities as agents and beneficiaries of
    development rather than as vulnerable subjects
    requiring care, protection or services. This is
    an inclusive development approach where their
    participation, as both contributors and
    beneficiaries, enhances human rights through
    development and development through human rights'

UN General Assembly 2008
35
Partnerships as central
  • People with a disability
  • Their families and/or caregivers
  • Wider community members
  • Other organisations involved in disability and
    development.

Photo K Thompson, cbm Australia
36
Doing with not Doing for
Principle partnership is with people with a
disability
  • Nothing about us without us

DPI Slogan
37
(No Transcript)
38
Networking Lobbying Awareness Raising Capacity
Development
39
WATSAN example
40
Mainstreaming Disability
  • Mainstreaming disability into development
    cooperation is the process of assessing the
    implications for people with a disability of any
    planned action, including legislation, policies
    and programmes, in all areas and at all levels.

41
Mainstreaming disability
  • a globally accepted strategy for promoting
    disability equality
  • not an end in itself
  • ensures disability perspectives and the goal of
    disability equality are central to all activities
  • Ideally includes
  • Organisation (policy, values, goals, staff,
    accountability reporting)
  • Programmes practice (throughout project life)

42
Q What have we learned from gender
mainstreaming?
  • Devise a clear mandate for disability and earmark
    appropriate funding
  •  Adopt disability as an official cross-cutting
    issue
  • Develop an implementation strategy with
    accountable, time-bound goals both in terms of
    employment and programme work
  • Devise an effective communication strategy
  • Establish a sub-group and/or disability officer
    with specific responsibility
  • Capacity development on (disability)
  • Work with target gp/ (PwD/ DPOs) for all
    stages
  • Collect disability-disaggregated data and develop
    disability analysis tools

43
Are there people with a disability in your
programs?
44
Camp school Pakistan
There are no people with a disability here but
are there?
Photo K Thompson, cbm Australia
45
Its a specialist issue...or is it?
46
They are welcome. But are they?
Photo K Thompson, cbm Australia
47
How do our programs partnerships target each
obstacle to participation?
Figure from Werner, D. (1999) Disabled Village
children a guide for community health workers,
rehabilitation workers, and families.
Healthwrights Palo Alto, CA, USA.
48
Good development practice Good disability
practice
  • i.e. Putting ourselves out of a job!?
  • For development practice to be good, it must be
    inclusive
  • Shared principles of good development and good
    disability practice. (E.g.. Partnerships,
    individualise, sustainable, empowerment, etc.)

49
Effective development based on
Photos K Thompson cbm Australia
Local Ownership
50
Harmonisation, consultation stewardship/accounta
bility
  • Fishing Boats
  • Southern India, Post Tsunami
  • Man with three fishing boats in his house.
  • Did you have three fishing boats before?
  • No worked as a labourer on another boat.
  • So what do you do with three boats? Do you have
    other people working for you?
  • No on Mondays and Tuesdays I take out this
    one, on Wed and Thur this one, etc
  • Previously 300 families and 8 fishing boats. Now
    300 fishing boats. One for each family.

51
Empowerment and Sustainable change
Photo cbm SEAPRO
Photo K Thompson, cbm Australia
52
Photo cbm Australia
53
Mutual accountability
Photo cbm SEAPRO
54
ACTIVITY
  • "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a
    dayTeach a man to fish and you feed him for a
    lifetime.
  • What does this Chinese Proverb tell us about
    development?
  • What doesnt it tell us? i.e. What is not taken
    into account?

55
Disability and emergencies
  • The same disability inclusive principles are
    relevant in all stages
  • What might be implications of disability for each
    stage? What could we do?
  • Preparedness
  • Immediate response
  • Rehabilitation and reconstruction
  • Leading to longer term development

56
E.g., of how this understanding of disability
challenge us..
  • Broaden and strengthen networks and partnerships
  • Comprehensive? Representative of all players?
    people with a disability as central? rights
    based?
  • Build an advocacy platform and agenda
  • Building capacity, networking, raising awareness,
    lobbying
  • Plan, monitor and evaluate programs from a human
    rights and broader social model perspective
  • Ie impairment and disability.
  • Involve people with a disability in all aspects
    of the program cycle.

57
Whats in a word?
  • Be specific
  • Do not refer to people, or groups of people only
    by their impairment
  • E.g.,Deaf people
  • Person first person not disability at centre
    stage
  • Person with a disability
  • Though some places prefer disabled person (as
    society is disabling
  • Maintain dignity
  • Avoid negative language about disability
  • Suffers from polio in danger of becoming
    blind

58
Whats in a wordExamples from cbm language guide
  • confined/restricted to a wheelchair
  • TRY wheelchair user - May mean mobility and
    independence for the person with a disability
  • Epileptic or afflicted with epilepsy
  • Where is the person? TRY person with epilepsy
  • Will work with marginalized group
  • Often tokenistic inclusion of people with a
    disability
  • Be specific who are they and how are they
    marginalised? How will the program address this?

59
(No Transcript)
60
Key stakeholders and instruments in disability
and development
61
Inclusive development stakeholders
  • Q Who are they in the countries you work in?
    (Who do we talk to..)
  • Our Partner organisations !
  • People with disabilities / Disabled People
    Organizations
  • Families and parents/caregivers of PWDs
  • Health workers, TBAs, medical specialists, local
    hospitals
  • Institutions (churches, community groups, village
    development committees...)
  • Development players (NGOs, CBOs, UN agencies
    etc)
  • Local government / central Government players

62
Inclusive development stakeholders
  • Q Who are they in New Zealand ? (Who is I.D.
    important to, in NZ?)
  • KOHA scheme - PMC
  • Govt development players - ie NZAID
  • CID
  • Disability focussed agencies/NGOs
  • People with disabilities in NZ ?
  • Donors in NZ ?
  • General public ?

63
Disability and the MDGs..not (even) on
the guest list!
  • Unless disabled people are brought into the
    development mainstream it will be impossible to
    cut poverty by half by 2015 or to give every girl
    and boy the chance to achieve a primary education
    by that date (i.e. achieve the MDGs)
  •  
  • James Wolfensohn, former president of the
    World Bank

64
Disability and the MDGs..not (even) on
the guest list!
  • MDG 1 Reduce extreme poverty and hunger by half
  • Challenges in achieving MDG 1...
  • WB estimates persons with disabilities comprise
    20 of the poorest of the poor
  • Approx. 20 of all disabilities caused by
  • malnutrition and gt 10 by infectious diseases.
  • An estimated 80 of people with disabilities
  • are unemployed (ILO)
  •  

BPKS Bangladesh
65
Disability and the MDGs..not (even) on
the guest list!
  • MDG 2 Achieve Universal Primary Education
  • Challenge in achieving MDG 2 ...
  • 90 of children with disabilities in developing
    countries do not attend school (UNESCO)
  • One third of the 77 million children out of
  • school have a disability (World Vision)
  •  

Includeeverybody.org
66
Disability, MDGs and PRSP
  • MDGs Policies, programmes, targets, indicators,
    monitoring evaluation do NOT include any
    reference to disability or PWDs?
  • PRSPs are becoming the operational framework
    to translate the global MDG targets into national
    action hence importance of INCLUSION !!

67
Disability Human Rights (the UNCRPD)
  • The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with
    Disabilities
  • Purpose to promote, protect and ensure the full
    and equal enjoyment of
  • all human rights and fundamental freedoms by all
    persons with disabilities, and to promote respect
    for their inherent dignity
  •  Significance
  • Affirms the rights of persons with disabilities
  • are human rights
  • Gives universal recognition to the dignity
  • of persons with disabilities.
  • Both a development and a human rights instrument

68
http//www.un.org/disabilities/
69
Disability Human Rights (the UNCRPD)
  • The Convention marks a paradigm shift in
    attitudes and approaches to persons with
    disabilities. From charity to rights and
    dignity.
  •  
  • Persons with Disabilities are
  • not viewed as "objects" of charity, medical
    treatment and social protection
  • .but as "subjects" with rights, and capable of
    claiming those rights and
  • can make decisions for their lives based on
    their free and informed consent, and are..
  • active members of society.

70
Development and the UN Convention
  • Article 32 International co-operation
  • Explicitly identifies 4 areas of cooperation
  • Inclusion accessibility of international
    development programmes
  • Capacity building
  • Research
  • Technical and economic assistance

71
Disability, KOHA I.D.
  • Background history
  • Key changes (see handout details)
  • New KOHA criteria in Section 4 of Handbook
  • PWDs are included as community of
    interest/identity
  • Community development should be inclusive of
    PWDs
  • New questions in Forms and Reports
  • Consideration in AM E (Forms Reports)

72
Disability HAF
  • Background ...a bit less explicit
  • Key changes (see handout details)
  • Operating Practice Consideration of all
    vulnerable groups (mentions PWDs) is important
  • Applications consider vulnerable groups in
    needs assessment and implementation
  • Reports - what changes to lives of vulnerable
    groups ?
  • - Involvement of vulnerable groups
    in implementation, monitoring and
    evaluation ?

73
Application to Project Management and Case studies
74
(No Transcript)
75
How an NGO and its programs can be Disability
Inclusive
  • Mainstreaming Programs, organisation, etc.
  • Knowledge (K)
  • Social model
  • Rights based
  • Twin track approach
  • Poverty and disability link
  • These shared understandings form the basis of our
  • ability to be disability inclusive.

76
Three guiding principlesfor implementing
Disability Inclusive Development
  • PwD are included Inclusion (I)
  • Remembering PwD and their needs
  • PwD participate Participation (P)
  • Nothing about us without us
  • PwD have access Accessibility (A)
  • Addressing barriers environmental, attitudinal
    and institutional

Note the KIPA (Edmonds 2003)
77
KIPA Framework
  • Knowledge, Inclusion, Participation, Access
  • Coordinate efforts among those responsible for
    implementing supporting programs
  • donors, government, public and private sector
    agencies
  • Helps identify gaps plan for inclusive
    development
  • Applied at various levels
  • programs, policy, national strategy, etc
  • Applied across sectors
  • e.g., health, education, vocational, emergency,

78
KIPA IDP Camp School Pakistan
  • 5000 people in camp
  • Cooperation of Pakistan Army, Relief
    International, Plan International, UNHCR, etc
  • School 1500 children
  • There is a plan to build this into a more
    permanent townships
  • Focus on education of children

79
ACTIVITY
  • Break into groups
  • Review the case study provided to your group
  • Take 20 mins to answer the questions in the table
    provided.
  • Report back to wider group

80
More information?
  • On disability in the program cycle
  • The Make Development Inclusive Mainstreaming
    Disability in Development Cooperation
  • http//www.make-development-inclusive.org/index.ph
    p?wid1024spken
  • mapping and training tools, reference lists,
    resource websites, documentation of good practice
    and case studies
  • KIPA
  • Edmonds (2005). Disabled People and Development.
    Poverty and Social Development Paper. Asian
    Development Bank
  • KIPA framework and application across various
    policy and practice levels and sectors.
  • Inclusive Development Practice A Guide to
    Mainstreaming Disability in Development Programs
    (Draft) (2009) CBM Australia
  • A get started brief guideline current being
    piloted.

81
Wrap up
82
A few examples on where to from here..
  • Organisation level
  • SWOT on existing programs, policies and networks
    in relation to disability inclusion what
    approach do they currently reflect?
  • Identify existing expertise in region NZ and
    country programs
  • Collating an evidence base baselines, practice
    examples, measures of success, etc
  • Allocating/seeking out budget.
  • Have you got/how will you get the support of
    management

83
Getting started
  • Close to home your tasks, team, organisation,
    etc.
  • Is your own workplace accessible?
  • Buildings
  • Communications and information
  • develop a working group
  • Identify capacity/information needs
  • Draw from various expertise/areas to get
    ownership across organisation

84
Getting started
  • Consider existing structures, plans, procedures,
    etc how could they start being disability
    inclusive?
  • Stats, tenders, job advertisements, progress
    reports, project cycle tools
  • Set priorities for some quick success good
    motivation
  • Existing Human resources and expertise need
    supplementing?

85
Reflection - closing
  • 2-3 things you have learned/been reminded of
  • 2-3 things you want to learn more about
  • 2-3 things you will do now/how will you act on
    this?
  • Consider for example,
  • Your role?
  • Your organisation
  • Partnerships
  • Participation

86
THANK YOU
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com