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DIFFERENTLY-ABLED
:CHALLENGES AND ISSUES
Presented by
M.Suresh Menon
Research Fellow –RGNF
Dept 0f Journalism and Mass
Communication
Differently abled-challenges and issues
Differently abled-challenges and issues
Louis Braille was visually impaired,
but his creation Braille, known by
his name, enabled blind people
worldwide to read and write. They
are the people who proved that it is
not disability but one’s ability that
counts.
Differently abled-challenges and issues
Objectives of the Study
• Differently-Abled And their
Educational Rights
• Differently-Abled and their Skill
Development
• The Differently–Abled and Financial
Inclusion
• Differently-Abled and Accesibility
Differently-Abled and their
Educational Rights
India’s population with disabilities has
increased by 22.4 per cent between 2001 and
2011. The number of disabled, which was 2.19
crore in 2001, rose in 2011 to 2.68 crore—1.5
crore males and 1.18 crore females. The growth
rate of disabled population is more in urban
areas and among urban females. The decadal
growth in urban areas is 48.2 per cent and 55
per cent among urban females. Among
scheduled castes, it is 2.45 per
• 1. SSA Inclusive education scheme has
included 10.71 lakh children with special
needs. (Source: Unified District Information
System for Education (UDISE) 2013-14)
• 2. Inclusive education of children with
disabilities in Secondary schools-(IEDSS)-
around 2 lakhs children with special needs.
• 3. Around one lakh children with special needs
studying in 977 special schools. (An NGO
study)
India must introduce mandatory
registration of persons with disabilities at
community level/ school level/ICDS levels.
It could be achieved by introducing village
disability registers, school special needs
registers, ward level disability registers
and issue add on card to Aadhaar card
/ration cards.This digitized data could be
used to provide smart ID cards replacing
existing paper based disability ID cards.
The other issues which are seen as a major barrier for inclusion
are listed below:
1. Children with disabilities remain invisible to the education
system;
2. Families are not supportive; 3. Teachers lack training,
leadership, knowledge and support to adapt curriculum;
4. Poor quality education; 5. Poor access to knowledge and
information for – parents,teachers, administrators and policy
makers
6. No inclusive education infrastructure – governance, policy,
planning, financing, implementation and monitoring
7. Lack of public support for inclusion; and
8. Lack of accountability and monitoring mechanisms
. On the whole, it could be argued that the political vacuum of
leadership and accountability for inclusive education was not
adequate. there are huge gaps in educational rights of persons
with special needs
Skill Development for Differently-Abled
The situation in India is ripe for persons with
disability to be part of the economic
workforce. We need to capitalize on the
successful models for persons with diverse
disabilities with special focus on severe
physical and mental disabilities and by giving
equal importance to all forms of employment
across the country .
Self employment skill training has been
successful in growing areas such as beauty
and wellness, mobile repairing and other
geographic specific growth areas
The National Skill Policy launched by the Prime Minister has a
target for skilling 38 lakh persons with disability in the next
seven years. The Department of Empowerment Of Persons with
Disability (DePWD) created inside Ministry of Social Justice and
Empowerment has helped create focus on the ecosystem for
PwD by launching the NationalActionPlan for PwD and the
Accessible India Campaign. The Skill Council for Persons With
Disability (ScPWD) has been formed to take the skill policy
forward. Hence, the situation in India is ripe for persons with
disability to be part of the economic workforce. We need to
capitalize on the successful models for persons with diverse
disabilities with special focus on severe physical and mental
disabilities and by giving equal importance to all forms of
employment across the country
In the last ten years, more than 27 3 job roles across 26
sectors have been opened up for persons with different
disabilities by identifying solutions and the environment
which will enable them to work effectively. More jobs need
to be opened up by finding solutions for persons with
different severe disabilities. There has to be a systematic
effort to develop leaders to absorb more persons with
disability. Holistic support systems have to be scaled to
provide services such as job analysis services, workplace
solutions, inclusion services, awareness and sensitization,
leadership development and more. This is critical for
skilling initiatives to be successful. NGOs like the Enable
Academy provide a platform for fostering collaborations
among communities working to mainstream livelihoods for
persons with disability. It is a platform where all
stakeholders can use and share resources and launch
campaigns which unleashes the power of collaborative
efforts and provides the much needed holistic support
required.
Namma Vaani, an interactive voice response
system which is available via a missed call
provides virtual networking for many disabled
across rural Karnataka. Persons with disability
share their stories, issues and solve each other’s
problems to gain awareness, hope, face their daily
challenges and become economically independent.
These technology based platforms will be the game
changers and will ensure a bright future for the
skilling of persons with disability.
“Make In India” will be successful when
there is “Change In India” which is
inclusive to all sections of society. Persons
with disability working successfully are
harbingers of this change.
Financial Inclusion of The
Differently–Abled
The financial inclusion of PwDs is,
therefore, more important as well as
challenging than other disadvantaged
sections because of associated difficulties
like low mobility, physical barriers, low
level of education about financial products
and scattered population of PwDs being an
hindrance in forming exclusive SHGs.
Financial inclusion in fact is key for any
planning towards building inclusive society
where the disadvantaged segment of the
society is assured of financial and social
security
As per 2011 Census, there are 26.8 million Persons
with Disabilities in India. 14.99 million are males
and 11.82 million are females with disabilities. It
may be seen that 18.63 million PwDs reside in
rural areas while 8.18 million reside in urban
areas. As per the data available, about 13.4 million
(8.8 million in rural India and 4.6 million in urban
India) PwDs are in employable age group. Out of
this 13.4 million PwDs in employable age group,
7.8 million are male and 5.6 million are females.
Also, out of the total PwD population, 14.6 million
are literate. It shows that PwDs is a large pool of
human resource whose potential to contribute
towards the economy of the country cannot be
ignored.
Financial inclusion is the availability of financial
services and various financial products at affordable
cost to the disadvantaged segment of the society. This
includes banking products and financial services like
insurance, pensions and loans for various purposes.
financial inclusion, in fact, is the key for any planning
towards . building an inclusive society where the
disadvantaged segment of the society is assured of
financial and social security. The Government of India
has recognized the importance of financial inclusion
and is stressing on the need of financial inclusion for
all. policies like Jan Dhan Yojana, Health Insurance for
poor, Mudra loans etc. are the National Priority
Progammes.
The Government of India has made some
important decisions which will be very
beneficial in the long run for Financial
Inclusion and overall welfare of the PwD’s
through Department of Empowerment of
PwD’s. - Inclusion of PwD’s in Priority
Sector Lending by Banks under 10 per cent
weaker section Target. - Introduction of
Swavlamban Health Scheme for PwD’s at
little over Rs 350 per year. - Premetric &
Post -metric Scholarship for PwD’s. -
Scholarship for top class higher education
to students with disabilities.- Launch of
Accessible India Campaign. - Launch of
National Action Plan for Skill Training of
PwD’s.
Differently-Abled and Accesibility
Accessibility is a preconditio for inclusion of persons
with disabilities. It enables persons with disabilities to
live independently and to participate comfortably and
safely in their community.
Disability and accessibility can be said to be inversely
proportional, where with an increase in accessibility,
the level of disability decreases. Accessibility may be
considered as an inherent right that benefits
everybody and not only a concern to persons with a
condition like disability, or to a demographic group like
the elderly
The ‘Accessible India Campaign (AIC)’ is a nation-wide
flagship campaign for achieving universal accessibility that
will enable persons with disabilities to gain access to equal
opportunities, to live independently and to participate fully in
all aspects of life within an inclusive society. The campaign
has been launched by the Department of Empowerment of
Persons with Disabilities (DEPwD), Ministry of Social Justice
& Empowerment. The campaign is geared towards enhancing
the accessibility of built environment, transport system and
Information and communication eco-system. AIC has a multi-
pronged strategy with key components as (a) leadership
endorsements of the campaign, (b) mass awareness, (c)
capacity building through workshops, (d) interventions (legal
frame-work, technology solutions, resource generation, etc.
and (e) leverage corporate sector efforts in a Public- Private
Partnership. DEPwD will sign a MoU with different States to
support implementation of the campaign. The strategy paper
for the campaign3 is based on the targets and indicators of
goal 3 of the Incheon Strategy (2013 – 2022).
Differently abled-challenges and issues
Differently abled-challenges and issues
Differently abled-challenges and issues

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Differently abled-challenges and issues

  • 1. DIFFERENTLY-ABLED :CHALLENGES AND ISSUES Presented by M.Suresh Menon Research Fellow –RGNF Dept 0f Journalism and Mass Communication
  • 4. Louis Braille was visually impaired, but his creation Braille, known by his name, enabled blind people worldwide to read and write. They are the people who proved that it is not disability but one’s ability that counts.
  • 6. Objectives of the Study • Differently-Abled And their Educational Rights • Differently-Abled and their Skill Development • The Differently–Abled and Financial Inclusion • Differently-Abled and Accesibility
  • 7. Differently-Abled and their Educational Rights India’s population with disabilities has increased by 22.4 per cent between 2001 and 2011. The number of disabled, which was 2.19 crore in 2001, rose in 2011 to 2.68 crore—1.5 crore males and 1.18 crore females. The growth rate of disabled population is more in urban areas and among urban females. The decadal growth in urban areas is 48.2 per cent and 55 per cent among urban females. Among scheduled castes, it is 2.45 per
  • 8. • 1. SSA Inclusive education scheme has included 10.71 lakh children with special needs. (Source: Unified District Information System for Education (UDISE) 2013-14) • 2. Inclusive education of children with disabilities in Secondary schools-(IEDSS)- around 2 lakhs children with special needs. • 3. Around one lakh children with special needs studying in 977 special schools. (An NGO study)
  • 9. India must introduce mandatory registration of persons with disabilities at community level/ school level/ICDS levels. It could be achieved by introducing village disability registers, school special needs registers, ward level disability registers and issue add on card to Aadhaar card /ration cards.This digitized data could be used to provide smart ID cards replacing existing paper based disability ID cards.
  • 10. The other issues which are seen as a major barrier for inclusion are listed below: 1. Children with disabilities remain invisible to the education system; 2. Families are not supportive; 3. Teachers lack training, leadership, knowledge and support to adapt curriculum; 4. Poor quality education; 5. Poor access to knowledge and information for – parents,teachers, administrators and policy makers 6. No inclusive education infrastructure – governance, policy, planning, financing, implementation and monitoring 7. Lack of public support for inclusion; and 8. Lack of accountability and monitoring mechanisms . On the whole, it could be argued that the political vacuum of leadership and accountability for inclusive education was not adequate. there are huge gaps in educational rights of persons with special needs
  • 11. Skill Development for Differently-Abled The situation in India is ripe for persons with disability to be part of the economic workforce. We need to capitalize on the successful models for persons with diverse disabilities with special focus on severe physical and mental disabilities and by giving equal importance to all forms of employment across the country . Self employment skill training has been successful in growing areas such as beauty and wellness, mobile repairing and other geographic specific growth areas
  • 12. The National Skill Policy launched by the Prime Minister has a target for skilling 38 lakh persons with disability in the next seven years. The Department of Empowerment Of Persons with Disability (DePWD) created inside Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment has helped create focus on the ecosystem for PwD by launching the NationalActionPlan for PwD and the Accessible India Campaign. The Skill Council for Persons With Disability (ScPWD) has been formed to take the skill policy forward. Hence, the situation in India is ripe for persons with disability to be part of the economic workforce. We need to capitalize on the successful models for persons with diverse disabilities with special focus on severe physical and mental disabilities and by giving equal importance to all forms of employment across the country
  • 13. In the last ten years, more than 27 3 job roles across 26 sectors have been opened up for persons with different disabilities by identifying solutions and the environment which will enable them to work effectively. More jobs need to be opened up by finding solutions for persons with different severe disabilities. There has to be a systematic effort to develop leaders to absorb more persons with disability. Holistic support systems have to be scaled to provide services such as job analysis services, workplace solutions, inclusion services, awareness and sensitization, leadership development and more. This is critical for skilling initiatives to be successful. NGOs like the Enable Academy provide a platform for fostering collaborations among communities working to mainstream livelihoods for persons with disability. It is a platform where all stakeholders can use and share resources and launch campaigns which unleashes the power of collaborative efforts and provides the much needed holistic support required.
  • 14. Namma Vaani, an interactive voice response system which is available via a missed call provides virtual networking for many disabled across rural Karnataka. Persons with disability share their stories, issues and solve each other’s problems to gain awareness, hope, face their daily challenges and become economically independent. These technology based platforms will be the game changers and will ensure a bright future for the skilling of persons with disability. “Make In India” will be successful when there is “Change In India” which is inclusive to all sections of society. Persons with disability working successfully are harbingers of this change.
  • 15. Financial Inclusion of The Differently–Abled The financial inclusion of PwDs is, therefore, more important as well as challenging than other disadvantaged sections because of associated difficulties like low mobility, physical barriers, low level of education about financial products and scattered population of PwDs being an hindrance in forming exclusive SHGs. Financial inclusion in fact is key for any planning towards building inclusive society where the disadvantaged segment of the society is assured of financial and social security
  • 16. As per 2011 Census, there are 26.8 million Persons with Disabilities in India. 14.99 million are males and 11.82 million are females with disabilities. It may be seen that 18.63 million PwDs reside in rural areas while 8.18 million reside in urban areas. As per the data available, about 13.4 million (8.8 million in rural India and 4.6 million in urban India) PwDs are in employable age group. Out of this 13.4 million PwDs in employable age group, 7.8 million are male and 5.6 million are females. Also, out of the total PwD population, 14.6 million are literate. It shows that PwDs is a large pool of human resource whose potential to contribute towards the economy of the country cannot be ignored.
  • 17. Financial inclusion is the availability of financial services and various financial products at affordable cost to the disadvantaged segment of the society. This includes banking products and financial services like insurance, pensions and loans for various purposes. financial inclusion, in fact, is the key for any planning towards . building an inclusive society where the disadvantaged segment of the society is assured of financial and social security. The Government of India has recognized the importance of financial inclusion and is stressing on the need of financial inclusion for all. policies like Jan Dhan Yojana, Health Insurance for poor, Mudra loans etc. are the National Priority Progammes.
  • 18. The Government of India has made some important decisions which will be very beneficial in the long run for Financial Inclusion and overall welfare of the PwD’s through Department of Empowerment of PwD’s. - Inclusion of PwD’s in Priority Sector Lending by Banks under 10 per cent weaker section Target. - Introduction of Swavlamban Health Scheme for PwD’s at little over Rs 350 per year. - Premetric & Post -metric Scholarship for PwD’s. - Scholarship for top class higher education to students with disabilities.- Launch of Accessible India Campaign. - Launch of National Action Plan for Skill Training of PwD’s.
  • 19. Differently-Abled and Accesibility Accessibility is a preconditio for inclusion of persons with disabilities. It enables persons with disabilities to live independently and to participate comfortably and safely in their community. Disability and accessibility can be said to be inversely proportional, where with an increase in accessibility, the level of disability decreases. Accessibility may be considered as an inherent right that benefits everybody and not only a concern to persons with a condition like disability, or to a demographic group like the elderly
  • 20. The ‘Accessible India Campaign (AIC)’ is a nation-wide flagship campaign for achieving universal accessibility that will enable persons with disabilities to gain access to equal opportunities, to live independently and to participate fully in all aspects of life within an inclusive society. The campaign has been launched by the Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities (DEPwD), Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment. The campaign is geared towards enhancing the accessibility of built environment, transport system and Information and communication eco-system. AIC has a multi- pronged strategy with key components as (a) leadership endorsements of the campaign, (b) mass awareness, (c) capacity building through workshops, (d) interventions (legal frame-work, technology solutions, resource generation, etc. and (e) leverage corporate sector efforts in a Public- Private Partnership. DEPwD will sign a MoU with different States to support implementation of the campaign. The strategy paper for the campaign3 is based on the targets and indicators of goal 3 of the Incheon Strategy (2013 – 2022).