You seem right to an extent mam. I think Indians in general
particularly in urban settings preferring singleton existence over
plural family norm has influenced choices of disabled people. However,
one can not deny the lack of support system and persistent poverty
which drives poor parants to shirk of their responsibility not by
choice but by compulssion in rural terrain. Many parants of disabled
people disapprove marrital alliance with co-disabled partners which
results in their separation from their parants.
On 8/29/14, Preeti Monga <[email protected]> wrote:
> Positive side is that disabled people must be getting more and more
> independent assisted by technology and other modern day support systems
> also
> getting more and more financially independent.
> Down side is probably not many non disabled  family members want to have
> anything to do with them. Probabely they don't have the time or inclination
> to do so.There is also a possibility that people are getting less tolerant
> to one another! Everyone wants to do what they want to, not wanting to make
> adjustments.
> Just a few thoughts.
> Preeti
>
> Preeti Monga
> Director
>
>
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> -----Original Message-----
> From: AccessIndia [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
> Of avinash shahi
> Sent: Friday, August 29, 2014 11:29 AM
> To: accessindia
> Subject: [AI] Census 2011: latest figures on disabled people and household
> size released
>
> Can we discuss why people with disabilities are increasingly living alone?
> http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/1-2-million-disabled-people-live-al
> one-in-India/articleshow/41138396.cms?intenttarget=no
>
> NEW DELHI: At least 1.2 million disabled people in India are living in
> households consisting only of people with disability. While the total
> population the disabled increased by just over 22 per cent over a
> decade, from almost 22 million in the Census 2001 to 26.8 million in
> 2011, the number of disabled people living on their own has nearly
> doubled, jumping by 84 per cent in the same period.
>
> This is revealed in the latest figures on disabled people and
> household size released by the census. About 6.3 lakh disabled people
> lived alone in single member households and 2.7 lakh two-member
> households had two disabled people each (about 5.5 lakh in all)
> staying on their own in households without any non-disabled person.
>
> While single member households consisting of a lone person with
> disability increased by 48 per cent from 4.2 lakh in 2001 to 6.3 lakh
> in 2011, the number of two-member households in which both were
> disabled increased almost one and a half times from 1.1 lakh to 2.7
> lakh in the same period.
>
> Among the larger states, Jammu & Kashmir has the highest proportion of
> households with at least one person with disability, over 12 per cent,
> followed by Odisha with 10 per cent of such households.
>
>
>
> Interestingly, in Delhi and Tamil Nadu, which have strong disability
> rights movements compared to other states, only 5 per cent of
> households were identified as having one or more disabled people.
> These movements have consistently maintained that official data is
> underestimating the actual number of disabled people in India.
>
> In the 2011 census, 92 per cent of the nearly 25 crore households in
> the country had no disabled people. Over two crore households had one
> or more disabled people. Almost 71 per cent of these households (1.46
> crore) were in rural areas while the remaining 60.5 lakh-plus
> households were in urban areas.
>
> There was a fall in the proportion of households with one or more
> disabled people from about 10 per cent in 2001 to just 8 per cent in
> 2011, though the absolute number of such households has gone up by
> over 20 lakh or 2 million.
>
> --
> Avinash Shahi
> Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU
>
>
>
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-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU



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