Full Description
The 2006 United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities differs markedly from other forms of international human rights law: it not only protects the rights of individuals but also addresses interpersonal relations and social structures. How did the convention attain this broad reach, and what does it tell us about the histories of human rights and disability law?
Progress from the Margins is an international history of the struggle for recognition of disability rights at the global level. Paul van Trigt chronicles how people with disabilities and their allies developed their own understanding of human rights, from the emergence of disability activism in the late 1960s through the negotiation of the convention. He traces the unexpected paths by which international recognition of disability human rights emerged, showing that it is not a story of linear progress but rather one of a decades-long series of discontinuous advances. Challenging accounts that criticize the limited scope of human rights in recent decades, van Trigt highlights how disabled people and their allies transformed human rights law by emphasizing social dimensions. He foregrounds the agency of disabled people from the Global South as well as the Global North, demonstrating how they shaped their own human rights. A groundbreaking account of disability internationalism, Progress from the Margins also reflects on the prospects for a world that embraces disability.
Contents
Introduction
1. Jerusalem 1968: Blocking "Promiscuous Scandinavia"
2. Belgrade 1975: "Equality . . . Not Materialized in Full"
3. Singapore 1981: "Nothing About Us, Without All of Us"
4. New York 1987: A Neoliberal Utopia of Development
5. Vienna 1993: "Adopt or Adjust Legislation to Assure Access"
6. Mexico City 2002: Taken by Surprise
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
-
- 電子書籍
- 愛され聖女は王子殿下の治療係【タテヨミ…
-
- 電子書籍
- 陰の実力者になりたくて!【ノベル分冊版…
-
- 電子書籍
- 瓜を破る【単話版】 7 ラバココミックス
-
- 電子書籍
- 週刊エコノミスト2016年12/27号