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Innocenti Digest No. 13
Promoting the Rights of Children with Disabilities
While there are grounds for optimism, we are still far
from seeing all the world’s 200 million children with
disabilities enjoying effective and equitable access to
basic social services and meaningful participation in
society. For example, around 90 per cent of children
with disabilities in developing countries do not
attend school.
Society must adapt its structures to ensure that all
children,
irrespective of age, gender and disability,
can enjoy the human rights that are inherent to their
human dignity without discrimination of any kind. In-
ternational human rights standards, including the Con-
vention on the Rights of the Child, the UN Standard
Rules on the Equalization of Opportunities for Persons
with Disabilities and the Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities, all point the way towards
overcoming discrimination
and recognizing the right
to full participation of children with disabilities – in the
home and community, in school, health services, rec-
reation activities and in all other aspects of life.
This
Innocenti Digest
addresses inclusion in the wid-
est societal sense and gives particular attention to
inclusive strategies for all levels of education.
Early
childhood development interventions and informal
education play a critical role in promoting children’s
development and in preparing them for adult life as
active participants in the local community and society.
It is a means for raising children’s awareness of their
rights and overcoming prejudice and discrimination.
Through education children acquire the skills neces-
sary to reach their full potential,
both as individuals
and citizens. Education offers one of the most effec-
tive means to break the cycle of poverty that all too
often overtakes children with disabilities and their
families. Education can also prepare other children
and the surrounding community to promote inclusion
and to be more receptive
to and supportive of chil-
dren with disabilities.
Disability cannot be considered in isolation. It cuts
across all aspects of a child’s life and can have very
different implications at different stages in a child’s
life cycle. Many of the initiatives to promote the
rights of children with disabilities overlap with those
for other excluded groups. This
Innocenti Digest
aims, therefore, to encourage actors at all levels −
from the local to the international −
to include chil-
dren with disabilities in
all
their programmes and
projects and to ensure that no child is left out.
The information presented here makes it abundantly
clear that real progress is possible in all countries,
including the poorest, and
that obstacles seeming to
be insurmountable can be overcome.
Marta Santos Pais
Director
UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre
1
Promoting the Rights of Children with Disabilities
Innocenti Digest No. 13
The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
recognizes the human rights of all children, including
those with disabilities. The Convention contains a
specific article recognizing and promoting the rights
of children with disabilities. Along with the CRC, the
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
(CRPD), adopted by the United Nations General
Assembly in December 2006, provides a powerful
new impetus to promote the human rights of all
children with disabilities.
In spite of the almost universal ratification of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the social
and political mobilization that led to adoption of the
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities,
disabled children and their families continue to be
confronted with daily challenges
that compromise the
enjoyment of their rights. Discrimination and exclu-
sion related to disabilities occur in all countries, in all
sectors of society and across all economic, political,
religious and cultural settings.
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