ABSTRACT

This book provides a concise guide to international disability law. It analyses the case law of the CRPD Committee and other international human rights treaty bodies, and provides commentaries on more than 50 leading cases. The author elaborates on the obligations of States Parties under the CRPD and other international treaties, while also spelling out the rights of persons with disabilities, and the different mechanisms that exist at both domestic and international levels for ensuring that those rights are respected, protected and promoted. The author also delineates the traditional differentiation between civil and political rights on the one hand, and economic, social and cultural rights on the other. He demonstrates, through analysis of the evolving case law, how the gap between these two sets of rights is gradually closing. The result is a powerful tool for political decisionmakers, academics, legal practitioners, law students, persons with disabilities and their representative organisations, human rights activists and general readers.

part 1|52 pages

General provisions

chapter 1|15 pages

Functions of the CRPD Committee

chapter 2|18 pages

Pillars of the CRPD

chapter 3|17 pages

Women and Girls with Disabilities

part II|70 pages

Civil and political rights

chapter 4|15 pages

Legal Capacity and Access to Justice

chapter 5|18 pages

Security of the Person

chapter 6|19 pages

Right to Life

chapter 7|16 pages

Participation in Political and Public Life

part III|78 pages

Economic, social and cultural rights

chapter 8|16 pages

Accessibility

chapter 9|19 pages

Right to Education

chapter 10|17 pages

Right to Work and Employment

chapter 11|16 pages

Inclusive Independent Living

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion