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Translating Human Rights in Education - The Influence of Article 24 UN CRPD in Nigeria and Germany (Paperback)
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Translating Human Rights in Education - The Influence of Article 24 UN CRPD in Nigeria and Germany (Paperback)
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The 2006 United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities (UN CRPD) is the first human rights treaty to
explicitly acknowledge the right to education for persons with
disabilities. In order to realize this right, the convention's
Article 24 mandates state parties to ensure inclusive education
systems that overcome outright exclusion as well as segregation in
special education settings. Despite this major global policy change
to tackle the discriminations persons with disabilities face in
education, this has yet to take effect in most school systems
worldwide.Focusing on the factors undermining the realization of
disability rights in education, Julia Biermann probes current
meanings of inclusive education in two contrasting yet equally
challenged state parties to the UN CRPD: Nigeria, whose school
system overtly excludes disabled children, and Germany, where this
group primarily learns in special schools. In both countries,
policy actors aim to realize the right to inclusive education by
segregating students with disabilities into special education
settings. In Nigeria, this demand arises from the glaring lack of
such a system. In Germany, conversely, from its extraordinary
long-term institutionalization. This act of diverting from the
principles embodied in Article 24 is based on the steadfast and
shared belief that school systems, which place students into
special education, have an innate advantage in realizing the right
to education for persons with disabilities. Accordingly, inclusion
emerges to be an evolutionary and linear process of educational
expansion that depends on institutionalized special education, not
a right of persons with disabilities to be realized in local
schools on an equal basis with others. This book proposes a refined
human rights model of disability in education that shifts the
analytical focus toward the global politics of formal mass
schooling as a space where discrimination is sustained.
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