Sustaining a Democratic Culture through Collaborative Engagements for Citizens with Disabilities: Part 2

Author:

Mhlongo Duma,Alexander Gregory

Abstract

The United Nations (UN) has since the year 2015 challenged countries to develop structures of collaboration between governments, businesses, and citizens to enhance the monitoring and evaluation of their social justice challenges, advocacy initiatives and the progress thereof. To achieve the UN’s Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development Goals, this chapter proposes for educational and workplace institutions to collaborate as sub-systems. Historically, citizens with disabilities have been hit the hardest regarding decent work opportunities and inaccessible basic education classroom amenities. The existence of a democratic culture in an ideal classroom setting should be where all learners are mentored to display the democratic principles of unity, uniformity, diversity and homogeneity. This chapter aims to contribute towards the imaging of teachers who succeed in creating and sustaining a democratic classroom environment, guided by the ethos of inclusive education, wherein both classrooms and workplaces of the year 2030 and beyond, iconise a democratic aura and praxis by adopting an institutional collaborative culture. As an ideal, all learners and employees will entrench the ethos of democratic co-existence by embracing diverse contexts of disability, when empathising with citizens with a disability. In this way a genuine democratic culture could possibly become spontaneously sustainable.

Publisher

IntechOpen

Reference40 articles.

1. Department of Labour and Employment. Employment Equity Act of No. 55 of 1998, amended 2014. Government Communications and Information Systems. Pretoria; 2015

2. United Nations. Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development [Internet]. 2020. Available from https://www.sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/21252030%20Agenda%20for%20 Sustainable%20Development%20web.pdf. [Accessed 2020-04-14]

3. Mhlongo D and Alexander G. 2014. A Framework to Enhance the Sustainability of Decent Employment Efforts for the Youth Population with a Disability. Presented at Education Association of South Africa (EASA), in Clarens, Golden Gates National Park, hosted by the Faculty of Education, University of the Free State; 2014

4. Mhlongo D and Alexander G. The Decent Work Agenda in South Africa: Findings from Interrogating the Millennium Development Goals Trends regarding Physical Disability. Presented at Sustainable Rural Learning Ecologies (SuRLEc), in Qwa Qwa UFS campus, hosted by the Faculty of Education, University of the Free State; 2015

5. World Health Organisation. International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health. Geneva; 2001

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