Disability Poverty and the Millennium Development Goals. Relevance, Challenges and Opportunities for DFID
Author: P Thomas
Date: 2005
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31 pages
(418 KB)
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What progress has the UK Department for International Development (DFID) made in mainstreaming disability? What are the challenges and opportunities ahead? This final report from the Policy Project of the DFID Disability Knowledge and Research (KaR) Programme reviews progress on addressing disability issues during the last year and identifies barriers to and opportunities for taking work forward. It finds that there are several challenges to overcome before DFID can be said to be implementing the twin-track approach to disability.
The World Bank estimates that 20 per cent of the world’s poorest people are disabled. The poverty impact of disability is large and growing, especially because disability can affect the entire family of the disabled. Disabled people are typically among the very poorest; they experience poverty more intensely and have fewer opportunities to escape poverty than non-disabled people. They are typically excluded from development activities, yet clearly the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) cannot be achieved without tackling disability. DFID cannot work effectively to reduce poverty and tackle social exclusion unless it makes specific efforts to address the needs and rights of the disabled.
Disability does have a clear home within DFID. Since 2004, DFID has introduced the Exclusion, Rights and Justice (ERJ) team, a Diversity Strategy and has improved engagement with the UK disability movement. Country offices have increased their activity on disability issues, with DFID India taking the lead. Yet there remains some internal confusion about the status of disability policy. Some key challenges remain:
DFID has considerable opportunities to take forward its existing work on disability:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Thomas, P., 2005, ‘Disability Poverty and the Millennium Development Goals: Relevance, Challenges and Opportunities for DFID’, Disability Knowledge and Research, Norwich
Author:
Disability Knowledge and Research, http://www.disabilitykar.net