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July, 2010Archive for

Disability in the Developing World: Visibility and the Workplace

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

The participation of people with vision impairments in the workplace is slowly increasing throughout the world. There are two general reasons for this – first a broad move towards a rights-based approach to disability, which has brought non-discrimination clauses and employment quotas to hiring policies in several countries around the world. Second, there has been a proliferation in parts of the industrialized world of assistive technologies that allow for greater communication and access to computing and office applications to people with disabilities. These in turn have increased equity in the workplace, especially in firms that adequately account for accessibility issues. A related outcome has been a spike in the number of organizations offering technology training for persons with disabilities in the developing world. In Latin America, for instance, technology training for persons with disabilities is a major area of development spending for the international agency Organization of American States (OAS).

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Accessibility of an industry

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

by Jamie Knight

When most people think of the web and accessibility they tend to think about the technical side of making the web accessible, this article seeks to buck that trend and instead talk about the accessibility of the web industry itself. Is the web industry accessible to those with disabilities? Are there any areas which might make the web industry well suited to people with disabilities, or vice versa? This article explores this relationship and my experiences with it so far.

A bit of background on myself may help put this article into context. I am a web designer /developer, I run my own company and I am on the autism spectrum. In many ways this article has been inspired by my interactions with the industry and my views from being on
the “disabled” side of the equation. Continue reading Accessibility of an industry

Why Accessibility Research

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

In my inaugural post, I thought I’d address a fundamental question for this blog – why accessibility research?

I get this question a lot, and askers come from nearly every camp – academia, industry, and advocates. Accessibility research is a label, and behind most labels is a dogma, something that differentiates that label from others and provides an implicit argument for its existence. Here’s why I think accessibility research needs to exist.

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The UNCRPD and Access to Assistive Technology in the Developing World

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

The United Nations Convention on the Rights and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) has been the first of all major international agreements on disability rights. With 145 signatories and 87 ratifications, a vast majority of the world has both agreed in principle to operationalize rights for persons with disabilities, and made a commitment to provide assistive technologies for their citizens as needed. While the convention is clearly a welcome move away from a medical model of disability to a more rights-based view, the extent to which assistive technologies will be made available to needs remains to be seen.

At several key points in the document, such as in Articles 4, 9, 20, 21, 26, 28, there is explicit mention of accessibility or assistive technologies (AT). These articles span from commitments to providing affordable AT to ensuring reasonable accommodation in the workplace for persons with disabilities. The convention’s promise is made significant by the existence of an optional protocol, which allows a signatory state’s citizen to bring a complaint to an international committee to investigate violations of the convention by a state party. Quite simply, accepting the optional protocol (as 54 states have done – including several UN Classified Least Developed Countries such as Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Haiti, Guinea, Mali, Nepal, Niger, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, and Yemen) means that a citizen can sue its own country for not standing up to its promise on signing the convention.

While activists and scholars broadly agree that the specificity of the convention is a good thing, it also raises questions about the ability of signatory nations to realistically provide assistive technology to their populations. An important reason is the price of existing assistive technologies. Setting aside the cost of accessibility, especially architectural barriers compliance, even the general assistive technologies available in the market can be prohibitively expensive. Wheelchairs can cost between US$100 to $25,000 and the range of cost is not an issue of greater convenience, but often the threshold cost of what is necessary – such as paraplegic wheelchairs at the expensive end.

Recently a number of projects have started donating used hearing aids to the developing world, but the real cost of over the counter cost devices cost upwards of US$100. Computing-related AT have increased the scope of social and economic participation, but these remain very expensive – market-prevalent screen readers for blind computer users cost in the range of US$1000, and most screen magnification systems are at least US$300 , Braille displays cost upwards of US$3500.

Overall, AT remains prohibitively expensive for a majority of people who need them. Certain types of AT go through phases of increased international interest – prosthetics, especially with an international concern on landmines and high profile spokespersons has both had a significant decrease in the cost and quality of artificial limbs and also led to research and development in the developing world.

In examining the question of whether some of the poorest countries in the world are able to live up to the commitments of the UNCRPD, a critical issue will be whether new research will bring down the cost of AT. At this point, almost all of the AT research in academic and private research remains restricted to the industrial world. The CRPD has already been strategic in recommending nation states invest in research on affordable AT, but the true gap of affordability will require very concerted efforts.