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Action Alert:
Support
House Resolution 3101 - Senate Resolution 3304 (6/15/10)
Also known as The Twenty First Century Communications and
Video Accessibility Act, just went through committee hearings,
nearly a year after being introduced. Referral to committee
is the second step that happens after a bill gets introduced;
in this case, H.R. 3101 has been referred to the Committee
on Energy and Commerce in the House and S 3304 is in the Committee
on Commerce, Science, and Transportation in the Senate. The
committees will report on the outcome of their hearings and
if that report is favourable, it will be brought to the floor
for a vote. If both houses approve, the bill passes and the
President can sign it into law.
A
Brief History of Disability Rights Legislation in the United
States (Universal Design Education Online)
It is difficult to understand the significance of the term
universal design without first examining how people who are
physically different have been treated socially, legally,
and politically in the United States over the course of this
century. While designers may not view this history as having
bearing on their creativity or being of their making, their
work has been instrumental in perpetuating the norms that
exclude some people from using buildings, landscapes, and
products.
A
Brief History of the Disability Movement (Int'l Organization
on Arts and Disability)
According to the U.S. Census, there are more than 54 million
people with disabilities in the United States. Historically,
the condition of having a disability has been viewed as tragic.
Through ignorance and fear, people with disabilities were
typically labeled beggars or indigents. The word handicap
itself is said to derive from cap in hand, an
activity familiarly associated with panhandling.
Disability
101: The Disability Rights Movement (Summit Daily News
- 8/2/10)
July 26 was the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Americans
with Disabilities Act (ADA), our most comprehensive piece
of civil rights legislation protecting the rights of individuals
with disabilities. Celebrations were held throughout the U.S.
marking this anniversary. Many of these events celebrated
the history of the disability rights movement, which led to
the ADA. I have been totally enthralled studying this history.
So I'm going to share with you the stories that captured my
heart.
Disability
Rights Movement (Answers.com)
Comprises a number of related but distinct social movements
advocating civil rights for an estimated 53 million U.S. citizens
(as of 1997) with physical, sensory, psychological, or cognitive
disabilities that affect their daily activities.
Introduction
to the Disability Rights and Independent Living Movement
(Berkeley U)
The disability rights movement asserts that people with disabilities
are human beings with inalienable rights and that these rights
can only be secured through collective political action. It
arises out of the realization that, as historian Paul Longmore
has written, "whatever the social setting and whatever
the disability, people with disabilities share a common experience
of social oppression."
Monitoring
the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
- Guidance for Human Rights Monitors (United Nations Human
Rights - 2010)
Women, men and children with disabilities are too often amongst
the most marginalized in all societies and face unique challenges
in the enjoyment of their human rights. The adoption and entry
into foce of the Convention challenge such attitudes and mark
a profound shift in existing approaches towards disability.
Oral
Histories of "Self Advocates" with Developmental
Disabilities Added to UC Berkeley Library
(UC Berkeley News - 5/21/10)
The disability history program in the Bancroft Library's Regional
Oral History Office (ROHO) has added a new collection of oral
histories of leaders in the self-advocacy movement, led by
individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
The collection documents the life stories of 13 self-advocacy
leaders across the United States.
The
Disability Rights Movement (American History exhibit)
The ongoing struggle by people with disabilities to gain full
citizenship is an important part of our American heritage.
The disability rights movement shares many similarities with
other 20th-century civil rights struggles by those who have
been denied equality, independence, autonomy, and full access
to society. This exhibition looks at the efforts - far from
over - of people with disabilities, and their families and
friends, to secure the civil rights guaranteed to all Americans.
The
Disability Rights Movement - The ADA Today
If you're over 30, you probably remember a time in the not-too-distant
past when a curb cut was unusual, there were no beeping sounds
at crosswalks on busy streets, no Braille at ATM machines,
few if any ramps anywhere, and automatic doors were common
only in grocery stores.
The
New Civil Rights (Disability Culture)
The Americans with Disabilities Act has unlocked the door;
now it's time to open it.
Thoughts
on "Policitcs of the Disability Rights Movement (Gathering
Forces - 2/13/10)
This will hopefully be the first of a two-part discussion
on disability, the next to follow in several months, and to
focus on mental ill-health/psychological disability,
race, and class. This is meant to be a broad overview of themes,
ideas, and movements, through comments on Ravi Malhotras
article, The Politics of the Disability Rights Movement.
Understanding
the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities:
A Handbook on the Human Rights of Persons With Disabilities
This manual is a tool for explaining the content and overview
of the CRPD.
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