Why Fight Disablism? A Global Perspective: Blogging against Disablism Day (BADD) 2012
I first wrote this essay in 2012, for a global on-line event in which people wrote about discrimination against persons with disabilities. I have lightly edited this essay to make it more relevant to audiences in 2021.
Why fight disablism, also known as ableism? Disablism (or ableism) is a form of discrimination toward people with disabilities?
The short answer takes one paragraph: We need to fight disablism because disablism is more than just an attitude. Disablism excludes people with disabilities, isolates them, leaves them out, leaves them behind, and pushes them to the margins of society. Disabled people are hurt in physical ways that can leave bruises, rope burns, broken bones, and even dead bodies. And they also are hurt in other ways that some say can be worse than physical abuse.
The long answer would have to involve listening to one billion people on the face of the Earth describe the one billion ways that disablism impacts their lives. Because one billion is the number of people with disabilities living in the world today. And, chances are, all of them would have a slightly different answer to what disablism means. And it’s not just disabled people and their loved ones who think it is important to address discrimination against people with disabilities. Two major international organizations—the World Bank and the World Health Organization (WHO)—have this to say about the effects of the social inequities that people with disabilities experience daily:
“Across the world, people with disabilities have poorer health outcomes, lower education achievements, less economic participation and higher rates of poverty than people without disabilities. This is partly because people with disabilities experience barriers in accessing services that many of us have long taken for granted, including health, education, employment, and transport as well as information.”
They cite many inter-related causes for these effects. And these include negative attitudes that others may sometimes hold toward people with disabilities:
“Beliefs and prejudices constitute barriers to education, employment, health care, and social participation. For example, the attitudes of teachers, school administrators, other children, and even family members affect the inclusion of children with disabilities in mainstream schools. Misconceptions by employers that people with disabilities are less productive than their non-disabled counterparts, and ignorance about available adjustments to work arrangements limits employment opportunities.”
If you want to read their evidence for yourself, check out the World Report on Disability that the World Bank and WHO released, with a big media splash, in September 2011: http://www.who.int/disabilities/world_report/2011/report/en/index.html
This publication is available in any of the major United Nations languages, namely, English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Russian, Arabic, and Chinese. Scholars, experts, and advocates still frequently cite the report today, in 2021.
I’m fortunate that my passion for international disability rights coincides with my career path. For more than eight years, I worked at an organization based in Washington, DC, called the U.S. International Council on Disability (USICD). When people ask me what the U.S. International Council on Disabilities (USICD) does, there are a few basic answers I could give. I can say that USICD works to mobilize the U.S. disability community to become more engaged with the international disability rights movement. It works to promote U.S. ratification of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), which is the first legally binding international human rights treaty to specifically protect the human rights of people with disabilities. And USICD also promotes disability inclusion in U.S. foreign assistance programs abroad. And, via the Global Disability Rights Library (GDRL) project, which I coordinated for three years,, USICD worked to deliver disability rights knowledge to advocates and policy makers in developing countries who have limited Internet connectivity. No, it’s not an “anti-disablism” organization per se. But I suspect that its mission would align well with the values of many of the people participating in the 2012 edition of Blogging Against Disablism Day (BADD).
The Blogging Against Disablism Day used to be an annual event held on May 1st each year. While it was active, the disability blogger at “Diary of a Goldfish” hosted the event each year. This meant her blog was the go-to link for finding all the other BADD posts for 2012. Her blog also is still where you can find archived BADD posts from previous years. Usually a hundred or more bloggers participated each year, all with something fresh to say about what disablism means to them. Many participating bloggers are themselves people with disabilities. Other participating bloggers are friends, families, and allies of disabled people. I hope you will explore the other BADD contributions also!
Hi Andrea.
Thanks for making your post available for BADD 2012. It’s so very easy to become so entrenched in your own problems, in your own country, that you forget that disablism & disability are a global issue.
Thank you for your thoughts and keeping on doing what you’re doing to raise international awareness of these very real problems faced by millions of people who can’t advocate for themselves.
Just to let you know that one of the links in your article is wrong. The “the go-to link for finding all the other BADD posts for 2012.” is actually linking to your post: “International Day of Mourning and Remembrance: Institutionalized Lives of People with Disabilities–Forgotten Lives and the Ones Who Fight Back”.
Cheers!
Gary Miller (@GaryAWTS)
1 May 2012
Gary, thanks for stopping by, and thanks for the catch! Don’t know how that slip happened, but I’ve fixed it now!
Andrea Shettle, MSW
1 May 2012
Dear Andrea.
Congratulation for a nice writing. Be sure, I will go through the BADD articles. You are from a first world and people with disabilities from south are not empowered enough to speak like you. Even, many people i met, they do not have a good dream even. They take it as a matter of nature and they think they are poor as they are disabled. Most of the people are not enthusiasm about their life.
Be sure, we will over come some day and we believe there is the sun behind the cloudy sky. it will rise one day.
Ishaque Mia
Ishaque Mia
1 May 2012
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