Fr. 76.00

Routledge Handbook of Disability Law and Human Rights

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This handbook provides a comprehensive and authoritative state-of-the-art review of the current and emerging research and policy on disability law.

Bringing together a team of respected and experienced experts, the handbook offers a range of jurisdictional and multidisciplinary perspectives. The authors consider historical and contemporary, as well as comparative perspectives of disability law. Divided into three parts, the contributors provide a comprehensive reference to the theoretical underpinnings, ongoing debates and emerging fields within the subject. The study provides a strong basis for consideration of contemporary disability law, its research foundations, and progressive developments in the area. The book incorporates interdisciplinary and comparative country perspectives to capture the breadth of current discourse on disability law.

This handbook provides a valuable resource for a wide range of scholars, public and private researchers, NGOs, and practitioners working in the area of disability law, and across national and transnational disability schemes. The work will be of important interest to those in the fields of sociology, history, psychology, economics, political science, rehabilitation sciences, medicine, technology, and law, among others.

List of contents



  1. Theoretical Underpinnings of Disability Law


  2. Section I


    1. The Social Model of Disability: Questions for Law and Legal Scholarship?

    Anna Lawson & Mark Priestley

    2. Beyond the Welfare State - What Next for the European Social Model?

    Bjørn Hvinden

    3. A Human Rights Model of Disability


    Theresia Degener




  3. Ongoing Debates in Disability Law


  4. Section II Introduction


    4. Today's Lesson is on Diversity

    Rosemary Kayess & Jennifer Green

    5. Equality of Opportunity in Employment? Disability Rights and Active Labour

    Market Policies

    Lisa Waddington & Mark Priestley & Betul Yalcin

    6. Disabled People and Access to Justice: From Disablement to Enablement?

    Anna Lawson

    7. Hit and Miss: Procedural Accommodations Ensuring the Effective Access of

    People with Mental Disabilities to the European Court of Human Rights


    Constantin Cojocariu


    8. Toward Inclusion: Political and Social Participation of People with Disabilities


    Lisa Schur




  5. Emerging Fields in Disability Law




Section III Introduction


9. Legal Capacity: A Global Analysis of Reform Trends

Lucy Series, Anna Arstein-Kerslake & Elizabeth Kamundia

10. Back to the Future? Article 19 and the Nordic Experience of Independent Living

and Personal Assistance


Ciara Brennan


11. eQuality: The Right to the Web

Peter Blanck

12. Disability and Ageing: Bridging the Divide? Social Constructions and Human Rights


Eilionòir Flynn


13. Disability and Genetics - New Forms of Discrimination?


Aisling dePaor


14. Inclusive Development Aid


Mary Keogh


15. Disability Family Policy and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of

Persons with Disabilities (CRPD): The Case of Israel


Arie Rimmerman and Michal Soffer

About the author










Peter Blanck is University Professor and Chairman, Burton Blatt Institute, Syracuse University, USA. He is also Honorary Professor, Centre for Disability Law & Policy, at the National University of Ireland, Galway. Blanck is Chairman of the Global Universal Design Commission (GUDC), and President of Raising the Floor (RtF) USA. He has written articles and books on the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and related laws, and received grants to study disability law and policy.

Eilionóir Flynn is the Deputy Director of the Centre for Disability Law and Policy, and Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, National University of Ireland Galway. Her interest in disability law stems from a broader interest in social justice and a recognition of the invisibility of people with disabilities in broader human rights discourse. Her current research interests in this field include legal capacity, disability advocacy and access to justice, and she has published widely in national and international peer reviewed journals on these issues, as well as producing a monograph on the implementation of the CRPD for Cambridge University Press.


Summary

This volume provides a comprehensive analysis of current and emerging research and policy in disability law. The contributors offer a range of jurisdictional and multidisciplinary perspectives. The chapters and commentary consider historical and contemporary, as well as comparative perspectives of disability law. The work is divided into three part

Report

The Ashgate Research Companion to Disability Law is an accessible but sophisticated treatment of the fast-moving field of disability law and policy. Addressing domestic, comparative, and international developments, it will become an important resource for researchers and practitioners in the many disciplines that touch the lives of people with disabilities. Michael Waterstone, Fritz B. Burns Dean, Loyola Law School.
 
 

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