Category Archives: Disability Rights

Levelling the playing field for disabled women

This is an edited and updated version of a speech given on a panel at Rehabilitation International Seminar, Embracing the Opportunities April 16 2014, held in Wellington.

Disabled women in New Zealand have made progress but there is still a long way to go. I will not outline yet again in detail the many inequalities faced by disabled women. For many disabled women the playing field is some distance away, never mind whether they can access it, or whether it is level or not.

In 2014 disabled women in New Zealand are still relatively invisible  and our interests, rights and perspectives are still neglected. We are still generally left off the agenda.

There is still systemic discrimination and a lack of understanding of the issues we face as disabled women, for example, mothering our own babies, the right to found a family, or for some women, sterilisation without their consent, a subject which has been in the news lately, relating to Article 17 of the CRPD  the integrity of the person. Women’s health and other important information and services are still quite inaccessible to us. A Google search for disabled women in New Zealand finds very little.

The current debate about social and economic inequality is exclusive of disability generally, never mind disabled women.

To continue the sporting analogy we are way behind the eight ball in international terms. That includes being behind some developing countries where disabled women are finding a strong voice.

Green MP Mojo Mathers’ message to disabled women at a celebration on International Women’s Day in Auckland earlier this year was reported as “Speak out when you see or experience injustice, identify potential partnerships to strengthen your voice and lobbying power and believe in your ability as women to make change happen.”  The message was to ”inspire change.” Celebrations are important, as is inspiration. But right now much more is needed. We need concerted and collected action.

Disabled women today

There is no longer a women’s caucus in DPA. That’s not because there is nothing left to do.  DPA has a policy on women. I know there is one because I and other disabled women helped to write it a long time ago.  There is now only one woman on the National Executive. What is the situation in other Disabled People’s Organisations?

Vision Impaired Empowering Women, VIEW was founded as a move for progress and a voice for blind and vision impaired women. It is now a localized support group.

We are forgetting our history. The inclusion of disabled women in the 120 years celebration of women’s suffrage Tirohia Mai exhibition, last year, was an attempt to reclaim it. But after the disabled women’s presentation alongside the exhibition the following discussion was more about disability history generally than about disabled women’s history or rights. It is clear that the energy of the eighties and early nineties has been dissipated.

Ironically this has happened at a time when we have more tools for progress at our disposal than we have ever had.

Tools for change

We have protection under the Human Rights Act and the Health and Disability Commission Act.

Objective 14 of the Disability strategy says “promote participation of disabled women in order to improve their quality of life.”

The CRPD takes the “twin track” approach” with Article 6 focusing directly on rights for disabled women and with disabled women’s issues threaded throughout. Our government is obliged to pay attention to disabled women’s rights.  And there are the other UN conventions such as CEDAW, the women’s convention and CROC, the children’s convention.

We have the Office for Disability Issues which has always been headed by women, and the Think Differently campaign.

There are also less formal, but potentially powerful tools available, in the form of the arts, the media and the Internet and the range of social media. Women With Disabilities Australia are a great example with their networks, web site, research, and publications. There are many excellent disabled women bloggers here and elsewhere. Social media are a very valuable tool for the growing International network of disabled women.

But in practice in New Zealand every other issue always seems to be more important and little work has been done on analysing what the twin track approach of the CRPD might mean today in a New Zealand context. There is no focus point for disabled women’s issues.

Sometimes in the disability world it is difficult to focus on the gender issue. Violence against women in a disability context tends to be lost in the compelling wider issue of general violence and abuse of disabled people, or issues for other, non-disabled women.

Disability is complex and nuanced, but we can no longer avoid the need to unpick these complex issues.

The intersection of disability and gender seems to create a barrier to the collective imagination. I am not sure why, since other groups of women are confronting intersections of gender and race for example, with some vigour.

In New Zealand we have not developed any widely accepted discourse on women and disability. We have not applied a gender analysis to disability or a disability analysis to gender, never mind other intersections.

Disabled women are leaders, but we are expected to lead on behalf of all disabled people, or to be content to see leadership as individual personal achievement.

Ageing disabled women

But action is becoming more urgent. As the population ages and women, disabled and non-disabled, live longer the numbers of disabled women are outstripping the numbers of disabled men. There will be more increasingly frail older disabled women who are living in poverty because of a lifetime of limited education and employment options.

The need for data

The response we often get is that there is no information about disabled women. That is not good enough. When the Disability Survey results from Statistics New Zealand come out next month we should expect and demand that all reports include gender analysis. We have to demand the same from everyone who collects any disability data, from MSD, the Ministry of Health, service providers and anyone else who collects and analyses population and other related information. Good information provides a strong foundation for us to build a level playing field.

Where next

Nothing will be handed to us. Without action from disabled women the playing field will remain the same as it has always been, distant and lumpy.  It needs leadership from us. We have to make our voices heard and work together across disability groups. Let’s not be seduced by individualistic approaches to progress. We may have to do things differently.

We can look for opportunities to add a disabled women’s perspective, as well as identifying and prioritising particular issues of importance to us. For example, there are opportunities for a gender perspective in the new government action plan for disability? There are also people who can be strategic allies and supporters, disabled and non-disabled. We have to find them and enlist their support.

Disabled women need an active and strategic voice to make change. How we develop that voice is the question. How do we develop a feminist and disability analysis for the twenty first century? I am interested to hear what disabled women think on the topic. This is a challenge to action.

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Filed under Disability Issues, Disability Rights, Inclusion, Information Accessibility, Women

Website access: A few basics.

Accessibility of any kind is really about eighty percent attitude and the other twenty percent know how.  When it comes to web accessibility the same applies. If you want to do it you can. Your web site is usually your front door to the world so make sure everyone can use it in the way that suits them, not the way it suits you and your brand advisers.

It takes a bit of thinking and planning, but the web is full of good and practical advice. In honour of Global Accessibility Awareness Day I have summarised a few basics to get you started.

The list does not guarantee an accessible web site, but if you do all of these things you will be on your way.

  • Accessibility should be part of all design considerations and plans from the outset.
  • Information on the web should be in accessible HTML.
  • Navigation should be clear, easy to follow and consistent, not changing in structure from page to page.
  • Web pages should be laid out clearly with correct mark up for headings structures and links etc
  • Use “alt” text to provide meaningful descriptions of images and graphics.
  • Colour contrast should be high, at least 70%. There are a number of free tools to test for this. Avoid hot colours.
  • Audio or audio-visual material should be captioned or have transcripts.
  • Pages should still be useable when images are turned off and when pages are enlarged to twice their normal size.
  • Pages should be usable by keyboard only.
  • You can upload audio files and Sign Language video, providing the same information in a range of formats.
  • Avoid using blinking text, throbbing, pulsing or flashing graphics or buttons.
  • Include a site map to help with navigation.
  • Use tagged files optimised for accessibility, both Word and PDF.
  • Regularly audit your site  to make sure you maintain accessibility.

Your users will thank you.

Global Accessibility Awareness Day

Global Accessibility Awareness Day is a community-driven effort whose goal is to dedicate one day to raising the profile of and introducing the topic of digital (web, software, mobile app/device etc.) accessibility and people with different disabilities to the broadest audience possible.”

 

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From disableism to human rights

The free online dictionary defines disableism as “discrimination against disabled people”. This is rather simplistic and does not state that discrimination is both direct and indirect, the direct being, for example, an employer not giving me a job for which I am well qualified simply because I am disabled. While this is distressing, inappropriate, misguided and often unlawful, it is the disableist indirect discrimination that is often harder to confront, quantify and eliminate.

Disableism as indirect, or systemic discrimination is the result of unspoken, unquestioned and often unnamed bias underlying cultures, values, systems, structures and some deeply seated religious beliefs.

Underlying attitudes and behaviours carry an assumption that disability is not normal, that it equals a lesser human value or is outside the range of regular human experience. Those who practice indirect discrimination are often unaware that their actions are discriminatory.

Indirect discrimination as disableism occurs when an apparently neutral policy, practice or criterion disadvantages people because of their disability or other characteristics, or a combination of their intersecting characteristics, such as disability and age, race, gender, sexual orientation etc. Unless the practice can be objectively justified it is discriminatory, or disableist.  A one-size-fits-all approach can easily lead to disableism or indirect discrimination.

An example of indirect discrimination: a company insists that all those applying for jobs as have driving licenses because there is an occasional need to deliver or collect work from clients. Since this prevents some people with disabilities from applying and as driving is not a core requirement for the job, the company is discriminating against this group of people, unless it can demonstrate that there is an objective reason to justify this. This kind of discrimination is quite common.

Other examples are;

  • Barriers in the built environment because universal design is not planned in.
  • Inaccessible information provided in only one format.
  • Education practices that exclude a variety of disabled children who may need extra time for exams, for example
  • Television programmes and movies that exclude through a lack of audio description, captioning and Sign Language.

While negative attitudes which result in disableism are harder to deal with they can be addressed, along with indirect discrimination in policy and practice.

Using a human rights analysis to confront and challenge disableism gives us access to a range of tools to combat it. Many countries have human rights legislation, and there are the United Nations international covenants and conventions, the most important of which is the Disability Convention  (CRPD.) Using these and educating ourselves and others about them can move the debate from a disabling and disableist one to one of rights, respect and dignity for everyone.

This is my contribution to Blogging Against Disableism Day.

 

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New Zealand Sign Language: A cultural treasure

A rather late very happy New Year to all readers of Low Visionary.  May 2014 bring real progress on disability rights and accessibility all over the world.

Prompted by recent spirited discussion about the decline of New Zealand Sign Language,  and the equally spirited continuing debate about cochlear implants, here is my perspective on the value of New Zealand Sign Language in the New Zealand context.

I should say at the outset that I am not Deaf. Nor can I communicate in New Zealand Sign Language. The visual, spatial qualities inherent to it are beyond my visual capacity. I do know how to work with a Sign Language interpreter though. Since meeting the New Zealand Deaf community many years ago I have been fascinated by their language and history, as well as getting to know some great people.

Over those years I have learned a great deal, joined in with the celebrations of Deaf community victories, and supported their campaigns for access. The Deaf community are articulate, confident, outward looking, and one of the most creative communities around.

It is sad that, although New Zealand Sign Language is one of our official languages, it does not seem to be recognised widely as a national treasure. This was brought into sharp focus for me recently when thinking about Sign Language while working on an arts accessibility project.

Sign Languages should be treasured as precious cultural artefacts in their own right. In some settings they are. In 1993 I watched a riveting and inclusive one woman theatre performance in American Sign Language at the Kennedy Centre in Washington DC. Closer to home in 1996, along with other international conference attendees in Auckland, I watched, spellbound, a skilled interpreter yodel, (in NZ Sign Language) along with the Topp Twins. She was as much a star as they were. I have attended other Signed performances, watched Sign singers, lots of Sign Language interpreted meetings and gatherings and enjoyed Deaf humour.

Yet more than twenty years after my first Deaf cultural encounter, and long after New Zealand Sign Language has become an official language, when I visit the web site of Te Papa Tongarewa,  our national cultural storehouse I find no trace of New Zealand Sign Language. There is lots of Maori content, probably not enough, and information in seven other languages besides English and Maori. Is it because being Deaf is associated with deficit rather than with language and culture? Is providing Sign Language seen as a cost which will add little value, rather than as a celebration of the linguistic and cultural heritage of a unique New Zealand community? How about providing information accessibly to New Zealand citizens who are entitled to it?

Kudos to the National Library which has recognised the importance of New Zealand Sign Language and decided that all exhibitions will be introduced in all our national languages. Kudos also to the theatres and arts organisations that have recognised and included Deaf language and culture in their work.  Others need to follow these examples. They could start by joining the activities during Sign Language Week celebrated in May each year.

The New Zealand National Anthem in New Zealand Sign Language, English and Maori. The video is an example of our three national languages, all of which are part of our history and culture.

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Filed under Accessible Engagement, Disability Issues, Disability Rights, Inclusion, Information Accessibility, The Arts, Web Accessibility