Theme: Removing barriers to create an inclusive and accessible society for
all
 


Background
 
Over one billion people, or approximately 15 per cent of the world's
population, live with some form of disability.
 
Persons with disabilities, "the world's largest minority", often face
barriers to participation in all aspects of society. Barriers can take a
variety of forms, including those relating to the physical environment or to
information and communications technology (ICT), or those resulting from
legislation or policy, or from societal attitudes or discrimination. The
result is that persons with disabilities do not have equal access to society
or services, including education, employment, health care, transportation,
political participation or justice.
 
Evidence and experience shows that when barriers to their inclusion are
removed and persons with disabilities are empowered to participate fully in
societal life, their entire community benefits. Barriers faced by persons
with disabilities are, therefore, a detriment to society as a whole, and
accessibility is necessary to achieve progress and development for all.
 
The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) recognizes
that the existence of barriers constitutes a central component of
disability. Under the Convention, disability is an evolving concept that
"results from the interaction between persons with impairments and
attitudinal and environmental barriers that hinder their full and effective
participation in society on an equal basis with others."
 
Accessibility and inclusion of persons with disabilities are fundamental
rights recognized by the CRPD and are not only objectives, but also
pre-requisites for the enjoyment of other rights. The CRPD (Article 9,
accessibility) seeks to enable persons with disabilities to live
independently and participate fully in all aspects of life and development.
It calls upon States Parties to take appropriate measures to ensure that
persons with disabilities have access to all aspects of society, on an equal
basis with others, as well as to identify and eliminate obstacles and
barriers to accessibility.
 
In spite of this, in many parts of the world today, lack of awareness and
understanding of accessibility as a cross-cutting development issue remains
an obstacle to the achievement of progress and development through the
Millennium Development Goals, as well as other internationally agreed
outcomes for all.
 
The commemoration of International Day of Persons with Disabilities in 2012
provides an opportunity to address this exclusion by focusing on promoting
accessibility and removing all types of barriers in society.


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