The Routledge International Handbook of Children's Rights and Disability

Author:   Angharad E. Beckett (University of Leeds, UK) ,  Anne-Marie Callus (University of Malta, Malta)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367521530


Pages:   686
Publication Date:   14 April 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Routledge International Handbook of Children's Rights and Disability


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Author:   Angharad E. Beckett (University of Leeds, UK) ,  Anne-Marie Callus (University of Malta, Malta)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   1.483kg
ISBN:  

9780367521530


ISBN 10:   0367521539
Pages:   686
Publication Date:   14 April 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

1.Introduction: Children’s Rights and Disability. Section One – Legislation and Policy. 2.The Human Rights Model for Children with Disabilities. Vignette One – Meet Aurora. 3.For the Full Incorporation of the Rights of Children, With or Without Disabilities, Into the Human Rights Model. 4.An Analysis of the UNCRPD Concluding Observations on the Rights of Children with Disabilities. 5.‘They still need to listen more’: Working in partnership with disabled young researchers to inform and shape country submissions to the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and UN Committee on the Rights of the Child. 6.Human Rights Through the Eyes of Children with Disabilities. Vignette Two – Meet Charlie. 7.Developing the Right(s) Approach for Autism. 8.Poverty, Deprivation and Disabled Children’s Right to Citizenship. 9.The Care Dependency Grant in South Africa: Challenges on the road to inclusive rights. Section Two – Children’s Voice. 10.Children’s Rights, Arts-based Methods and Gramsci’s Common Sense: The possibilities of freedom. 11.Beyond the Spoken Word - Facilitating the disabled child’s voice through the Mosaic approach. Vignette Three – Meet Liv. 12.Disabled Children’s Participation in Healthcare Decision-Making. 13.Participation of Disabled Children in Health Guidelines Development. 14.The Right to an ‘Active Voice’ Without Words: Co-creating knowledge in special schools with Art Research Together. Vignette Four – Meet Liam. 15.The Rights of the Child When Symbolic Language is Out of Reach. 16.Do All Children Have the Right to Express Views? Listening to ‘differently-voiced’ communicators. Section Three – The Life Course in Childhood. 17.Babies with Disabilities and Their Entitlement to Imagined Hopeful Futures. 18.Is Disability a Justification to Undermine the Right to Life?. Vignette Five – Meet Ane. 19.Down Syndrome Abortion Bans: Law and ethics. 20.Clash of Competing Rights in Surrogacy: Embryos, foetuses and children with a disability. 21.Framing Does Matter: How health professionals can empower disabled children and their families. 22.From ‘Retarded’ Education to Authentic Life: A Personal Education Retrospective. Vignette Six – Meet Michaela. 23.Design as an Agent of Children's Rights? Inclusive mobility design for children with disabilities. 24.Assistive Technologies as Rights Enablers. 25.‘Look At Us…We’re Walking’: Parental advocacy v. a child’s privacy in the age of internet sharing. 26.An Open Exploration Around End-of-Life Journey’s for Children Facing Terminal Illness/Severe Disability. Section Four – Life Domains in Childhood. 27.The Changing Landscape of Inclusive Education: A shift toward universal design for learning. Vignette Seven – Meet Ġinġa. 28.‘Lawfare’ and the Role of Civil Society on Promoting the Inclusive Education Public Policy in Brazil. 29.A Certain Kind of Freedom, a Certain Subject of Right. The disability dispositif of inclusion and the government of the disabled child in the Italian education system. 30.Social Justice and Language Rights for Deaf Children. 31.Through the Eyes of Children with Disabilities: Recognising children’s agency in their play in inclusive playspaces. 32.Disabled Children’s Access to Music. Music’s transformational potential and music therapy’s dis/enabling role in making music accessible. Vignette Eight – Meet Euletta. 33.The Right to Grow Together: Exploring the roles of community agents in providing support for early adolescents with disabilities to make friends and join groups. 34.Sex, Love, and Human Rights: Sexual rights for children and youth experiencing disability. 35.Who is Worthy of Rights? An analysis of children living at the intersections of disability, citizenship and migration in the United States and Italy. 36.The Right to Safety: Promoting the authority of disabled children to tackle rights resistance. 37.Ceci n'est pas un dénouement | This is not a conclusion.

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Author Information

Angharad E. Beckett is Professor of Political Sociology and Social Inclusion and Director of Research and Innovation at the School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Leeds. She is a member of the interdisciplinary Centre for Disability Studies at the University, where she was for many years a joint Director. Her research interests include disability theory and politics, the resistance practices of the disabled people’s movement, inclusive education, and play/leisure for disabled children and young people. She teaches Disability Studies at undergraduate and postgraduate level and has supervised many doctoral students in this field. She founded and is Co-Chair of the Editorial Executive for the open-access International Journal of Disability and Social Justice. Anne-Marie Callus is Associate Professor in the Department of Disability Studies, Faculty for Social Wellbeing, University of Malta. She lectures, researches, and has published on disability rights, empowerment of persons with intellectual disability, inclusive education and disabled children’s rights, as well as cultural representations of persons with disability. She is Deputy Editor of Disability & Society.

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