Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia. It defined
discrimination as ‘any distinction, exclusion, limitation
or preference which, being based on race, colour, sex,
language, religion, political or other opinion, national
or social origin, economic condition or birth’, results in
individuals being treated unequally in education (Article 1).
The 1989 UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
(CRC), which all countries in the region signed, included
two articles on the right to education. In addition, a
separate article referred to education for children with
disabilities, recognizing the ‘special needs of a disabled
child’ and calling on ‘assistance … provided free of charge’
and ‘designed to ensure that the disabled child has
effective access to and receives education … in a manner
conducive to the child’s achieving the fullest possible
social integration and individual development’ (Article 23)
(United Nations, 1989). Turkey registered reservations
on articles 17, 29 and 30 of the CRC, affecting access to
information; minority groups’ right to share culture,
language and religion; and education’s role in developing
mind, body and talents and respect for others’ rights.
The 1990 World Declaration on Education for All,
adopted in Jomtien, Thailand, called on countries to
commit actively ‘to removing educational disparities’.
‘Underserved groups: the poor; street and working
children; rural and remote populations; nomads and
migrant workers; indigenous peoples; ethnic, racial,
and linguistic minorities; refugees; those displaced by
war; and people under occupation, should not suffer
any discrimination in access to learning opportunities’
(Article 3, §4). People with disabilities were not included
in the list but were mentioned where the declaration
called for steps to ‘provide equal access to education to
every category of disabled persons as an integral part
of the education system’ (Article 3, §5). The declaration
thus distinguished between disabled persons and the
underserved (UNESCO, 1990).
The Statement and Framework for Action of the
1994 World Conference on Special Needs Education in
Salamanca, Spain, further established the principle that
‘schools should accommodate all children regardless of
their physical, intellectual, social, emotional, linguistic
or other conditions’ (Framework, p. 6) and urged states
to ‘adopt as a matter of law or policy inclusive education’
(Statement, p. ix) . It recognized the need for schools to
‘include everybody, celebrate differences, support learning,
and respond to individual needs’ (Preface, p. iii) and helped
shift the focus from learner to system, recognizing that
schools would need to be restructured (UNESCO and Spain
Ministry of Education and Science, 1994). The 2000 World
Education Forum in Dakar, Senegal, acknowledged that
inclusive education emerged ‘in response to a growing
consensus that all children have the right to a common
education in their locality regardless of their background,
attainment or disability’ (UNESCO, 2000, p. 18).
In 2006, the right to inclusive education was established
in the UN Convention for the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities (CRPD), which has been ratified by 181 countries
and signed by 9 others, including Tajikistan and Uzbekistan;
8 have declined to sign. Article 24 specified that ‘States
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