1st Edition

Human Rights and Disability Interdisciplinary Perspectives

    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    The formerly established medically-based idea of disability, with its charity-based approach to treatment and services, is being replaced by a human rights-based approach in which people with impairments are no longer considered medical problems, totally dependent on the beneficence of non-impaired people in society, but have fundamental rights to support, inclusion, and participation. This interdisciplinary book examines the diverse concerns that people with impairments face in the context of human rights, provides insights into new developments on important issues relating human rights to disability, and features new approaches and solutions to vital problems in the current debate.

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgment *

    Chapter 1 General Introduction: Human Rights and Disability - Interdisciplinary Perspectives

    Alicia Oullette *

    Part 1: Human Rights and Disability – Different Voices *

    Chapter 2 Remarks on a Disability-Conscious Bioethics

    John-Stewart Gordon *

    Chapter 3 Theology, Disability, and Human Rights: Difficult Past, Promising Future

    Johann-Christian Põder *

    Part 2: Human Development and Inclusion *

    Chapter 4 Grounding Disability and Human Rights with the Capabilities Approach

    Christopher A. Riddle *

    Chapter 5 Human Rights and Persons with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities: An Elusive but Emerging Paradigm

    Donato Tarulli, Dorothy Griffiths and Frances Owen *

    Chapter 6 On Human Rights and Human Duties: Is there a Moral Obligation to Inclusion?

    Holger Burckhart and Bennet Jäger *

    Chapter 7 The Right to Inclusive Education: Practical Implications in German Schools

    Petr Frantik *

    Part 3: Justice and Legal Protection *

    Chapter 8 Disability Rights, Legal and Moral

    Hans Reinders *

    Chapter 9 From Manifesto to Action: Transforming the Aspiration of Disability Human Rights into Accountable Government Action

    Jerome Bickenbach *

    Chapter 10 Human and Civil Models of Rights: Healthy and Ill Disabled and Access to Healthcare

    Anita Silvers and Leslie Pickering Francis *

    Chapter 11 Agency and Disability. A Rights-Based Approach

    Michael Boylan *

    Chapter 12 Afterword

    Akiko Ito *

    Index *

    Contributors *

    Bibliography *

    Biography

    John-Stewart Gordon, MA in philosophy and history from the University of Konstanz (2001) and Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Göttingen (2005), Germany. He is full professor and head of the Research Cluster for Applied Ethics at Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas, Lithuania. In addition, he has been visiting professor at Queen’s University Kingston, Canada (2009–2010) and permanent visiting professor at Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas, Lithuania (2012–2015). Furthermore, he is member of the board of Bioethics since 2007 and has been area-editor and board member of the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2007–2014). He had written and edited several books in the context of practical philosophy and published peer-reviewed articles and special issues at international leading journals and encyclopaedias including Bioethics, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, Baltic Journal of Law & Politics, Ethical Perspectives, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy and Oxford Bibliographies Online Philosophy. He taught philosophy and bioethics at the University of Tübingen (Germany), Ruhr-University Bochum (Germany), Duisburg-Essen University (Germany), Queen's University in Kingston (Canada), Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas (Lithuania) and the University of Cologne (Germany).

    Johann-Christian Põder studied theology and philosophy in Tartu, Greifswald and Göttingen. He graduated from Tartu University in Estonia (theology, 2001) and received his Ph.D. in theology from Göttingen University in Germany (2010) with a thesis on phenomenological ethics of K. E. Løgstrup. He was lecturer in ethics at the Theological Institute of the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tallinn (2008–11) and substitute lecturer in modern theology at Tartu University (2011). He was also working as chaplain at Tallinn Prison (2007–2008) and Chaplain General of Prisons at Estonian Ministry of Justice (2009–2013). In 2011–2012 and 2014, he was research associate in GANI_MED-Project at Greifswald University in Germany, where he is still member of a working group in medical and theological ethics. Since 2015 he is Carlsberg Foundation postdoctoral fellow at the Faculty of Theology at Copenhagen University, Denmark, working on a book on predictive medicine, ethics, and religion.

    Holger Burckhart, born in 1956, completed his Ph.D. in philosophy in 1990 and his postdoctoral lecture qualification in 1997. In 2008 he was appointed to the professorship for "Anthropology and Ethics in Curative Education, taking Special Account of People with Disabilities" at the Faculty of Human Sciences at the University of Cologne. From 2007 to 2009 he was also prorector for "Teaching, Studies and Study Reform" at the University of Cologne. He is currently the rector of the University of Siegen, vice-president of the German Rectors’ Conference for the department of "Teaching, Learning, Teacher Training, and Lifelong Learning" and member of the German Accreditation Council. In 2014 he was appointed to the professorship for "Philosophy of Education with special focus in Philosophical Anthropology, Ethics and Theory of Science" at the University of Siegen. In 2015 he was elected to the board of the European University Association.

    Disability human rights talk is ubiquitous, but disability human rights thought is scarce. This book helps fill that gap, by subjecting human rights rhetoric to rigorous but supportive interrogation. An excellent roster of authors show us what is needed to promote the flourishing of disabled people. Professor Tom Shakespeare, University of East Anglia.