Participation, Legal Capacity, and Gender: Reflections from the United Nations Partnership on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Project in Serbia

Author:

Wescott Holly12,Ferri Delia23ORCID,MacLachlan Malcolm12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Maynooth University, N91HX32 Maynooth, Ireland

2. Assisting Living and Learning (ALL) Institute, Maynooth University, N91HX32 Maynooth, Ireland

3. School of Law and Criminology, Maynooth University, N91HX32 Maynooth, Ireland

Abstract

The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) establishes that people with disabilities shall enjoy their human rights on an equal basis with others. Those rights include the right to legal capacity and to protection against discrimination, including intersectional and multiple forms of discrimination on the basis of disability and gender. In an effort to support the realisation of the CRPD, the United Nations team in Serbia undertook a project to address the implementation of these rights under the UN Partnership on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNPRPD) programme. Namely, by bringing together stakeholders from the UN, government and civil society, the UNPRPD project in Serbia sought to create structural changes to uphold the rights of people with disabilities. With a view of understanding the process of change within, rather than the outcomes of, this UPRPD project, twenty-eight semi-structured interviews were conducted using the Most Significant Change Technique (MSCT) with key stakeholders involved in such a project. The interviews were analysed using Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to preserve the unique and diverse perspectives of participants who had differing roles across the project. The analysis allowed us to identify a number of facets of the process that facilitate structural change: coalition-building events; strengthening stakeholder capacity and relationships; the participation of persons with disabilities; and innovation in terms of what made the project significant, novel and in itself a change. All these facets are discussed in this article, with the purpose of supporting global efforts in alignment with the CRPD. On the whole, this article aims to support a better understanding of disability-inclusive development projects in line with the CRPD and to give evidence on how countries may begin to tackle the structural exclusion of persons with disabilities in society.

Funder

the Irish Research Council in Ireland

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Engineering

Reference33 articles.

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3. United Nations (2022, April 10). Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Optional Protocol, Available online: https://www.un.org/disabilities/documents/convention/convoptprot-e.pdf.

4. United Nations Development Programme (2022, February 01). UNPRPD Strategic and Operational Framework, Available online: http://67.199.83.28/doc/SOF-WEB-20160608.pdf.

5. (2022, December 22). United Nations Partnership on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. (N.d.). Who We Are. Available online: https://unprpd.org/who_we_are.

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