Original HRC document

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Document Type: Final Report

Date: 2016 Dec

Session: 34th Regular Session (2017 Feb)

Agenda Item: Item3: Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to development

GE.16-22489(E)



Human Rights Council Thirty-fourth session

27 February-24 March 2017

Agenda item 3

Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,

political, economic, social and cultural rights,

including the right to development

Report of the Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities

Note by the Secretariat

The Secretariat has the honour to transmit to the Human Rights Council the report of

the Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities, pursuant to Council

resolution 26/20. In her report, the Special Rapporteur provides an overview of the

activities undertaken in 2016, as well as a thematic study on access to support by persons

with disabilities. The study includes guidance for States on how to ensure the provision of

different forms of rights-based support and assistance for persons with disabilities, in

consultation with them.

United Nations A/HRC/34/58

Report of the Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities

Contents

Page

I. Introduction ................................................................................................................................... 3

II. Activities of the Special Rapporteur ............................................................................................. 3

A. Country visits ........................................................................................................................ 3

B. Conferences, meetings and engagement with stakeholders .................................................. 3

C. Communications ................................................................................................................... 4

III. Support services for persons with disabilities ............................................................................... 5

A. What is support? ................................................................................................................... 5

B. The importance of support .................................................................................................... 5

C. Rethinking care and assistance ............................................................................................. 7

IV. Support to persons with disabilities in international human rights law ......................................... 8

A. State obligation to ensure access to support .......................................................................... 8

B. Support in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities ................................. 9

C. Multiple and intersectional approach to support ................................................................... 11

D. Unpacking the obligation to provide access to support ........................................................ 12

V. Ensuring access to support for persons with disabilities ............................................................... 14

A. General State obligations ...................................................................................................... 14

B. Obligations related to specific types of support .................................................................... 18

VI. Conclusions and recommendations ............................................................................................... 21

I. Introduction

1. The Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities, Catalina Devandas

Aguilar, submits the present report to the Human Rights Council pursuant to its resolution

26/20. It contains a description of the activities she carried out in 2016 and a thematic study

on access to support by persons with disabilities. In preparing the study, the Special

Rapporteur convened a regional expert consultation in Addis Ababa in September 2016 and

analysed the responses to a questionnaire sent to Member States, national human rights

institutions, agencies of the United Nations system, civil society organizations and persons

with disabilities and their representative organizations. As at 5 December 2016, she had

received 114 responses.1

II. Activities of the Special Rapporteur

A. Country visits

2. In 2016, the Special Rapporteur visited Zambia from 18 to 28 April (see

A/HRC/34/58/Add.2) and warmly thanks the Government for its cooperation prior to,

during and after the visit. The planned visit to Morocco (18 to 28 July) was postponed at

the last moment at the request of the Government and has not been rescheduled.

3. The Special Rapporteur has agreed to undertake a visit to France during the course

of 2017 and has requested invitations to visit Cuba, the Philippines, Qatar and Viet Nam.

B. Conferences, meetings and engagement with stakeholders

4. During the year the Special Rapporteur participated in numerous conferences and

expert meetings, which allowed her to exchange information, share good practices and raise

awareness of disability-related issues. She participated, inter alia, in the fifty-fourth session

of the Commission for Social Development in New York (February), the annual interactive

debate on the rights of persons with disabilities at the Human Rights Council (March), the

World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, Turkey (May) and the Social Forum of the

Human Rights Council (October), which focused on the rights of persons with disabilities

in the context of the tenth anniversary of the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of

Persons with Disabilities. She also attended a meeting of the Human Dimension Committee

of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the Forum on Human Rights

organized by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Ireland and several expert

consultations on social protection, disability assessment and mental health organized by

other United Nations experts, agencies, organizations of persons with disabilities or

academia.

5. In June, the Special Rapporteur participated in the ninth session of the Conference of

States Parties to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, held in New

York, and its parallel events. As mandated by the General Assembly, she also engaged with

the United Nations Statistical Division, the Inter-Agency and Expert Group on Sustainable

Development Goal Indicators and with several United Nations agencies to advocate for the

1 See www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Disability/SRDisabilities/Pages/Provisionofsupporttopersons

withdisabilities.aspx.

disaggregation of data by disability in the implementation of the Sustainable Development

Goals.

6. In July, together with the Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples,

she organized an expert meeting on indigenous persons with disabilities, which convened

for the first time the main United Nations and other international experts from both

constituencies, as well as indigenous persons with disabilities. The meeting informed the

panel discussion on the situation of indigenous persons with disabilities that took place

during the ensuing meeting of the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

7. On 26 October, the Special Rapporteur presented her annual report to the General

Assembly on disability-inclusive policies (A/71/314). The report was made available in

accessible formats. She also contributed to the report of the Secretary-General titled

“Towards the full realization of an inclusive and accessible United Nations for persons with

disabilities” (A/71/344 and Corr.1) and other reports of other United Nations bodies.

8. To mark the International Day of Persons with Disabilities, the Special Rapporteur,

together with other United Nations experts, United Nations agencies and disability

advocacy organizations, organized several awareness-raising activities in Geneva on 2

December under the campaign to embrace diversity called “A day for all”.

9. In June, the Special Rapporteur became a member of the Coordination Committee of

Special Procedures and she continues to collaborate closely with other mandate holders,

including the Special Rapporteur on the right to adequate housing as a component of the

right to an adequate standard of living, and on the right to non-discrimination in this

context, the Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the highest attainable standard

of physical and mental health, the Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples,

the Independent Expert on the enjoyment of all human rights by older persons, the

Independent Expert on the enjoyment of human rights by persons with albinism, the

Working Group on the issue of discrimination against women in law and in practice and a

number of country mandate holders. Moreover, she has engaged with other United Nations

experts, including the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General on Disability and

Accessibility and the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Violence against

Children, and with the United Nations Partnership to Promote the Rights of Persons with

Disabilities, the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the Committee on

the Rights of the Child and the Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel,

Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. In November 2016, she was appointed a

member of the advisory board of the global study on children deprived of liberty that has

been commissioned by the Secretary-General at the invitation of the General Assembly.

10. The Special Rapporteur also held consultations with several United Nations agencies

and other stakeholders, such as the World Health Organization, the International Labour

Organization, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization,

representatives of national human rights institutions, numerous persons with disabilities and

their representative organizations, other non-governmental organizations, academics and

ambassadors.

C. Communications

11. Summaries of communications sent and replies received during the period covered

by the present report are available in the communications reports of special procedures

(A/HRC/31/79, A/HRC/32/53 and A/HRC/33/32 and Corr.1).

III. Support services for persons with disabilities

12. The present report aims to raise awareness and provide guidance to States on how to

ensure access to different forms of support for persons with disabilities inclusive of a

human rights-based approach.

A. What is support?

13. Support is the act of providing help or assistance to someone who requires it to carry

out daily activities and participate in society. Support is a practice, deeply embedded in all

cultures and communities, that is at the basis of all our social networks. Everyone needs

support from others at some stage, if not throughout their life, to participate in society and

live with dignity. Being a recipient of support and offering support to others are roles we all

share as part of our human experience, regardless of impairment, age or social status.

However, while some forms of support have been naturally integrated into social design,

others, such as that required by persons with disabilities, are still marginal.2

14. Support for persons with disabilities encompasses a wide range of formal and

informal interventions, including live assistance and intermediaries, mobility aids and

assistive devices and technologies. It also includes personal assistance; support in decision-

making; communication support, such as sign language interpreters and alternative and

augmentative communication; mobility support, such as assistive technology or service

animals; living arrangements services for securing housing and household help; and

community services. Persons with disabilities may also need support in accessing and using

general services, such as health, education and justice.

15. For most persons with disabilities, access to quality support is a necessary

precondition for living and fully participating in the community on the basis of choices

equal to others. Without adequate support, persons with disabilities are at risk of falling into

neglect and institutionalization. The provision of appropriate support is necessary to the

realization of the full spectrum of human rights and enables persons with disabilities to

achieve their full potential, thus contributing to the overall well-being and diversity of the

communities in which they live. For many persons with disabilities, support represents an

essential precondition for their active and meaningful participation in society, while

preserving their dignity, autonomy and independence.

16. The existence of social and environmental barriers creates the need for support. For

example, persons with disabilities who live in inaccessible communities may require

greater support than if they lived in accessible ones. Individual support needs also vary

according to personal factors, including level of impairment, age, socioeconomic status and

ethnic origin. While the existence of strong non-discrimination legal frameworks and fully

accessible general environments significantly facilitate the participation of persons with

disabilities, many of them may still require support measures to be able to participate in the

community on an equal basis with others.

B. The importance of support

17. Persons with disabilities constitute 15 per cent of the world population,

approximately one billion people. Many of them require different forms of support,

2 Tom Shakespeare, Help (Birmingham, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland,

Venture Press, 2000).

including for basic day-to-day activities such as getting up, bathing, dressing and eating.3

The sustained ageing of the global population, particularly in high-income countries, has

also had a substantial impact on the demand for disability-related support, as older persons

tend to be overrepresented in the disability community.4 Other sociopolitical factors such as

conflict and migration increase the demand for support, as support networks tend to fall

apart in such situations.

18. Despite the rising demand, the support needs of most persons with disabilities

worldwide are not being met. Evidence indicates that in most developed and developing

countries, the majority of persons with disabilities have limited access to support services.5

There is a shortage of community support services for persons with disabilities who require

personal assistance. In many countries, only 5-15 per cent of those in need of assistive

devices and technologies are able to obtain them.6 Deaf and deafblind persons frequently

face difficulties in accessing trained interpreters, particularly in rural or isolated

communities. Persons with psychosocial and intellectual disabilities are overrepresented

among the homeless because of the lack of support for living in the community and for

decision-making. Furthermore, general public services in such areas as education and

employment do not envision support measures to ensure the full participation of persons

with disabilities. While all persons with disabilities face challenges in accessing support,

those with high support needs are disproportionately affected by the lack of appropriate

services.

19. Regretfully, there is little public and political interest or attention to the support

needs of persons with disabilities. In many countries, support is not included in national

legislation and policies and, when available, it is an underfunded residual service with

scarce provision that does not match people’s needs.7 Moreover, whereas there are some

forms of formal support for persons with disabilities in many high-income countries, this is

not the case in many low- and middle-income countries. Consequently, the majority of

persons with disabilities have to rely on informal forms of support, primarily from their

families and personal networks.

20. Support is a normal part of community life, with families serving as the first source

of support for everyone. For many persons with disabilities, family support serves as a

bridge to access other assistance needed to fully enjoy their human rights. However, when

no other options are available and families are the sole source of support, the autonomy of

persons with disabilities and their family members is reduced. Those being supported have

no choice or control over the assistance they require to pursue their life plans, and questions

of overprotection and conflict of interest commonly arise. Families — especially the

poorest — are also under significant pressure as unpaid familial support also affects social

relationships, income levels and the general well-being of the household. Women and girls

are disproportionately affected, as in practice they are the main providers of support within

the household, reducing their freedom and choices to pursue their own life plans.

21. The absence of appropriate support systems increases the risk of segregation and

institutionalization. When families do not get the necessary support, there is great pressure

to place their family member with a disability in an institution. In addition, service

providers in many countries continue to claim that institutions are the best way to support

persons with disabilities. Thus, the only way a family can get any support for accessing

basic services is by placing their family member in an institution. Both institutionalization

3 World Health Organization (WHO) and World Bank, World Report on Disability 2011, p. 29.

4 Ibid., pp. 34-35. 5 Ibid., pp. 139-140.

6 See who.int/disabilities/technology/activities/en/.

7 WHO and World Bank, World Report on Disability 2011, pp. 144-147.

and the lack of support within the family put persons with disabilities at risk of neglect,

violence and abuse.

22. States should therefore adopt and implement policies and programmes that enable

persons with disabilities to obtain the support they need to participate in decisions affecting

their lives and in the life of their communities. The protection and promotion of human

rights of persons with disabilities should be at the centre of these policy efforts, rather than

focusing on charitable and medical approaches.

C. Rethinking care and assistance

23. For a long time, responses to the assistance needs of persons with disabilities have

been framed in terms of care. While care as a concept can be understood and used in

several ways, the disability community has historically been critical of the idea of “being

cared for” and of the traditional role of caregivers. Service models of care have traditionally

treated persons with disabilities as passive objects or recipients of care, or as a “burden” for

family and society, rather than as active holders of rights. Whether in formal or informal

settings, care services have traditionally regarded persons with disabilities as dependents,

which in most cases has not enabled them to fully participate in decisions affecting their

lives.

24. Care services also have a legacy of segregation and disempowerment of persons

with disabilities. In fact, most services were built under the medical and assistentialist

models, which prompted the confinement of persons with disabilities in institutions, leading

to the loss of control of their lives and their ultimate objectification. Therefore, for many

persons with disabilities the notion of care bears a heavy historical connotation associated

with oppression and invalidation.8

25. The disability community has challenged the traditional concept of care on the basis

of a social understanding of disability. The social model of disability draws attention to the

interaction between an individual’s perceived or actual impairment — be it physical,

sensory, mental or intellectual — and the disabling barriers that hinder people from

participating in society. Therefore, it is critical to enable inclusive societies that support

persons with disabilities to participate and have the freedom and opportunities to live lives

they value. This means replacing the legacy of paternalism, dependency and stigma that

exist behind traditional approaches to care with the concept of support as a State obligation

arising from human rights, equality and social justice.

26. The philosophy of independent living, which outlines the need for persons with

disabilities to have autonomous and independent lives, reinforces the notion of support.

However, independence needs to be framed in a way that takes into account the

interdependence of human experiences and accepts reliance on others as a fundamental

aspect of that interdependence, thus moving away from narrow interpretations of

independence that conflate it with self-sufficiency and self-reliance.9 In this regard, support

must ensure that persons with disabilities are able to exercise choice and control over their

own lives, irrespective of their physical, sensory, mental and intellectual impairments, and

over their own views, rather than having to follow the views of those looking after their

needs.

8 Teppo Kroger, “Care research and disability studies: nothing in common?”, Critical Social Policy,

vol. 29, No. 3 (2009), pp. 398-420.

9 Jenny Morris, “Impairment and disability: constructing an ethics of care that promotes human rights”,

Hypatia, vol. 16, No. 4 (November 2001), pp. 1-16.

27. At the same time, there is a need to recover and acknowledge the personal

experience of impairment that informs the support needs that persons with disabilities have

in order to participate in society, experiences that may have been rendered marginal in the

disability-rights debate.10 The acceptance of persons with disabilities as part of human

diversity should influence the way societies perceive and respond to individuals’ support

requirements.

28. Against this background, States must move away from the assistentialist and

medical approaches and rethink their policy and practice of care from a human rights

perspective. The provision of access to support is essential for the implementation of the

Sustainable Development Goals. While the debates on political and social economy of care

are receiving increasing attention from activists, researchers, States and international actors,

they do not adequately address the rights of persons with disabilities. Discussions on care in

the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development must be inclusive of persons with

disabilities and incorporate a human rights-based approach to disability. The enjoyment by

all persons with disabilities of all human rights and fundamental freedoms should be at the

centre of any model of support and assistance.

IV. Support to persons with disabilities in international human rights law

A. State obligation to ensure access to support

29. International human rights law requires States to provide persons with disabilities

access to appropriate support to carry out daily activities and participate in society. The

Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities — the highest international standard

on promotion and protection of the rights of persons with disabilities — clearly stipulates

the obligation of States to ensure access to a wide range of support services to persons with

disabilities, and provides a comprehensive framework for its implementation. The

Convention on the Rights of the Child also recognizes the obligation of States to ensure the

assistance required by children with disabilities for achieving their fullest possible social

integration and individual development (art. 23).

30. Regional human rights instruments have also recognized support to persons with

disabilities. The European Social Charter (revised) enshrines the right of persons with

disabilities to independence, social integration and participation in the life of the

community, calling on States to facilitate access to technical aids and support services (art.

15). The Additional Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights in the Area of

Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (Protocol of San Salvador) establishes an obligation

to adopt measures to assist persons with disabilities to achieve the greatest possible

development of their personality, including the implementation of programmes specifically

aimed at providing them with the resources and environment needed for attaining this goal

(art. 18). While the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights establishes a general

obligation to facilitate “special protection measures” for persons with disabilities (art. 18

(2) and (4)), the draft protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the

rights of persons with disabilities adopted by the African Commission on Human and

Peoples’ Rights in April 2016 explicitly recognizes support as a necessary measure to

enable the realization of the rights of persons with disabilities (arts. 2 (h), 8, 10, 12, 13, 14,

16, 17, 20, 23, 25 and 26). Finally, the Incheon Strategy to “Make the Right Real” for

Persons with Disabilities in Asia and the Pacific considers community inclusion and

10 Ibid.

support as part of its policy direction. Its goal 4, Strengthen social protection, includes a

target on enhancing services and programmes, including for personal assistance and peer

counseling, that support persons with disabilities in living independently in the community.

31. That the core international human rights treaties do not explicitly mention support

measures for persons with disabilities does not imply that the obligation did not exist prior

to the adoption of the Convention of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Support is a

human rights obligation arising from various rights, including the right to an adequate

standard of living, the right to social protection, the right of everyone to the enjoyment of

the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health and the right to education. The

Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, in paragraph 33 of its general

comment No. 5 (1994) on persons with disabilities, recognized that support and an adequate

standard of living are interconnected and that the provision of necessary support services to

persons with disabilities, including assistive devices, increases their level of independence

in their daily living and to exercise their rights.

32. Support can also be derived from the basic principles of human rights, such as

dignity, universality, individual autonomy, equality and non-discrimination, participation

and inclusion. The universal nature of human rights provides an obligation on States to

promote the full realization of rights for all people. Persons with disabilities should enjoy

all human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis with others. Access to

adequate support is indeed a precondition for persons with disabilities to effective exercise

of their human rights on an equal basis with others and, therefore, to live with dignity and

autonomy in the community.

33. The State obligation to ensure access to support to persons with disabilities must be

distinguished from the obligation to provide accessibility. While accessibility is an

obligation related to the physical environment, transportation, information and

communications — a requirement for barrier-free, inclusive societies — support is an

obligation linked to the individual. Instead of transforming the environment, the goal is to

assist the individual in a range of different activities, from communication to mobility.

Whereas the level of accessibility may increase or decrease the need for support, the two

are complementary obligations enabling persons with disabilities to live independently and

to participate fully in all aspects of life.

34. Similarly, the right to reasonable accommodation is distinct from, although

complementary to, the obligation to provide support. States are required to make all

necessary and appropriate modifications or adjustments that do not impose a

disproportionate or undue burden to allow persons with disabilities to exercise their rights.

Such modifications or adjustments may include support measures tailored to the needs of an

individual in a particular case. However, the obligation to ensure access to support is not

limited by the qualification of disproportionate or undue burden.

B. Support in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

35. In the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities support is firmly

grounded in a complex substantive equality model introduced by the Convention. The

treaty underlines the importance of taking the diversity of the human experience into

account. The Convention underlines the importance of adopting all appropriate measures to

support the full and effective participation of persons with disabilities in society on an equal

basis with others. Its rights-based approach also places persons with disabilities at the

centre of all decisions affecting them, including decisions about support and assistance.

36. The Convention does not define support, but refers to it in several of its provisions.

According to the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, “support” is a broad

term that encompasses both informal and formal support arrangements, of varying types

and intensity. 11 All forms of support should be provided while respecting the general

principles of the Convention (art. 3).

37. Support is a cross-cutting obligation under the Convention. As part of the general

obligations provided in article 4, States parties have an obligation to adopt all appropriate

measures to implement the rights recognized in the treaty, including the provision of

support services when necessary (art. 4 (1) (a)). States must also undertake or promote

research and development, and promote the availability and use, of devices and assistive

technologies (art. 4 (1) (g)), and provide accessible information to persons with disabilities

about mobility aids, devices and assistive technologies, including new technologies, and

other forms of assistance, support services and facilities (art. 4 (1) (h)).

38. The provision of specific forms of support is further referred to in articles 9

(accessibility), 12 (equal recognition before the law), 13 (access to justice), 16 (freedom

from exploitation, violence and abuse), 19 (living independently and being included in the

community), 20 (personal mobility), 21 (freedom of expression and opinion, and access to

information), 23 (respect for home and the family), 24 (education), 26 (habilitation and

rehabilitation), 27 (work and employment), 28 (adequate standard of living and social

protection) and 30 (participation in cultural life, recreation, leisure and sport).

39. In many of its concluding observations, the Committee on the Rights of Persons

with Disabilities has called upon States to provide access to support to persons with

disabilities in different aspects of life.12 More specifically, in its general comment No. 1

(1994) on equal recognition before the law, the Committee stressed that support must

respect the rights, will and preferences of persons with disabilities, and that the type and

intensity of support to be provided will vary significantly from one person to another owing

to the diversity of persons with disabilities.

40. Many forms of support, such as the support required to exercise legal capacity, are

subject to immediate realization.13 While full realization of other forms of support may be

achieved progressively, States have an obligation to take immediate steps to the maximum

of their available resources, including those made available through international assistance

and cooperation, to ensure support for persons with disabilities, including the adoption of

legislative and policy frameworks and budgetary measures.

41. The Convention challenges traditional approaches to care and has the potential to

redress the legacy of disempowerment and paternalism. Furthermore, the notion of support

in the Convention also has the potential to override traditional understandings of care and

assistance for other groups, such as older persons and children. The Convention restores the

importance of the “human being” in the human rights discourse by emphasizing the

individual and social aspects of the human experience.14 These innovations can and should

be incorporated into the implementation of all existing human rights instruments.

11 General comment No. 1 (2014) on equal recognition before the law, para. 17.

12 See www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/CRPD/Pages/CRPDIndex.aspx.

13 General comment No. 1, para. 30.

14 Gerard Quinn and Anna Arstein-Kerslake, “Restoring the ‘human’ in ‘human rights’: personhood and

doctrinal innovation in the UN disability convention”, in The Cambridge Companion to Human

Rights Law (Cambridge University Press, 2012), pp. 36-55.

C. Multiple and intersectional approach to support

42. In providing support to persons with disabilities, States need to acknowledge the

different layers of identities within the disability community. Persons with disabilities

comprise a very heterogeneous group with a wide range of impairments as well as identity

markers such as race, colour, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, language, religion,

national, ethnic, indigenous or social origin, age and other status. States need to address the

specific support needs of individuals throughout their life cycle.

1. Women and girls with disabilities

43. Women and girls with disabilities face significant difficulties in accessing support

throughout their lives. On average, they are less likely to study and work; they earn less

than men and thus have fewer opportunities to access appropriate support. Moreover,

existing support services are frequently not responsive to the needs, nor respectful of the

rights, of girls and women with disabilities. Male staff are often assigned to provide

assistance, which may not respond to their preferences and create a heightened risk of

abuse. In this regard, support cannot be addressed in gender-neutral terms. When designing

and implementing policies and interventions on support, States must take into account the

systemic and multiple discrimination faced by women and girls with disabilities. They must

remove all barriers that interfere with access by women and girls to comprehensive support

arrangements and provide appropriate assistance to those women with disabilities who

perform care and support responsibilities as parents, without reinforcing patterns of

discrimination and negative stereotyping.

2. Children with disabilities

44. Children with disabilities and their families require different types of support

services, especially in the education and health sectors. They include assistive technology,

communication support and individualized education plans, and information and assistance

to families of children with disabilities in need. For too long, children and adolescents with

disabilities have been mere recipients of “special care”, when this is available at all, which

resulted in widespread segregation, institutionalization and neglect. Instead, States must

organize support services and measures that foster their well-being and enable them to

realize their full potential. Families need help to understand disability in a positive way and

to know how to help support their children to be autonomous and independent. Limited

understanding of care can hinder their right to express their views freely on all matters

affecting them, in accordance with their age and maturity, and to be provided with

disability- and age-appropriate assistance to realize that right.

3. Older persons with disabilities

45. Older persons with disabilities also have difficulties in accessing support

arrangements for daily life, such as personal assistance, assisted living arrangements and

palliative care. While families are the most common source of support for older persons

with disabilities in most countries, there is an increasing demand for institutional care,

especially from family members and other informal supporters of persons with dementia,

which is increasing the risk of institutionalization among older persons with disabilities.

Importantly, older women with disabilities are more likely to be institutionalized owing to

the different life expectancies of men and women. The provision of in-home support

services, including personal assistance and help with household chores, can avoid

institutionalization and improve the quality of life of older persons by enabling them to stay

at home (see A/HRC/30/43, para. 72).

4. Disadvantaged groups

46. Persons with disabilities belonging to groups that have been historically

discriminated against or disadvantaged (such as indigenous peoples, ethnic minorities and

persons living with HIV/AIDS) are disproportionately affected in accessing support

arrangements and services. This also applies to migrants, persons living in conflict

situations, internally displaced persons, refugees, asylum seekers, stateless persons and

prisoners with disabilities, as humanitarian responses tend to overlook their support needs.

Moreover, there is a strong link between belonging to a racial and cultural minority and

experiencing coercion and institutionalization.15 Policies and programmes to ensure access

to support must seek to overcome the impact of the multiple and aggravated forms of

discrimination faced by persons with disabilities belonging to these groups in accessing

support.

47. Policies and programmes to ensure access to support should respond to the

heterogeneous needs of the diverse disability community, which includes deaf, deafblind

and autistic persons, persons with psychosocial and intellectual disabilities and persons

with albinism. For example, in Kazakhstan new regulations provide that all blind and

deafblind persons are entitled to personal assistance. Nonetheless, while impairment-

specific considerations may be necessary to provide targeted support services for specific

groups, States should carefully assess whether the adoption of specific measures that

benefit certain groups may exclude others.

D. Unpacking the obligation to provide access to support

48. Following the standards developed by the Committee on Economic, Social and

Cultural Rights, 16 the Special Rapporteur has identified four interrelated and essential

elements of the obligation to provide support to persons with disabilities. These elements

can vary in accordance with different conditions and types of support arrangements.

1. Availability

49. Appropriate support services and arrangements must be available to all persons with

disabilities in sufficient quantity within countries. States should consider establishing a

system, under domestic law, to ensure access to a wide range of support measures. This

system can be composed of a single scheme or a variety of schemes, both formal and

informal. States have a duty to ensure that support is available for persons with disabilities,

regardless of whether it is actually provided by public service providers, civil society,

families, communities, or a combination of public and private actors. While the support

provided by family, friends and the broader community is extremely important and should

be encouraged and enabled, it is not always a reliable or sustainable solution in the longer

term (see A/HRC/28/37, paras. 35-36).

50. Support systems should ensure the availability of an adequate number of functioning

programmes and services to provide the fullest possible range of support to the diverse

population of persons with disabilities, including communication support, support in

decision-making, mobility support, personal assistance, living arrangements services and

community services. Ensuring the availability of a reliable, skilled and trained workforce,

15 Ruchika Gajwani and others, “Ethnicity and detention: are black and minority ethnic (BME) groups

disproportionately detained under the Mental Health Act 2007?”, Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric

Epidemiology, vol. 51, No. 5 (May 2016), pp. 703-711.

16 General comments No. 13 (1999) on the right to education, No. 14 (2000) on the right to the highest

attainable standard of health and No. 19 (2007) on the right to social security.

including sign language interpreters, interpreters for the deafblind, personal assistants and

other intermediaries, is a critical component of ensuring the availability of support.

Assistive devices and technologies for persons with disabilities should also be available.

2. Accessibility17

51. Support services and arrangements should be accessible to all persons with

disabilities, especially the most disadvantaged ones, without discrimination of any kind.

States must ensure that support is available within safe physical and geographical reach for

everyone, including those living in institutions. All facilities and services providing

support, public and private, including information and communications technologies and

systems, must be accessible for the diverse disability community. States must take positive

measures to ensure that persons with disabilities living in rural and remote areas also have

access to support services and arrangements. Dissemination of information about existing

services and social protection schemes must also be ensured.

52. Support must be affordable for all persons with disabilities. Support services

represent a significant cost for persons with disabilities, preventing them from climbing out

of poverty. States must ensure that support is available at nominal or no cost to the

maximum extent of their available resources, and take into account the gender disparity in

income and access to financial resources. Social protection systems can constitute a

powerful strategy to facilitate access to support services for persons with disabilities (see

A/70/297, para. 9). Qualifying conditions for accessing support must be reasonable,

proportionate and transparent, and should not be limited to those persons protected by

social insurance schemes.18 Additionally, States should include the provision of essential

assistive devices and technologies in the coverage of national health insurance and/or social

protection schemes, on the basis of the World Health Organization priority assistive

products list (ibid.). States should also consider waiving import duties and taxes on

assistive devices and technologies that are not produced domestically (ibid., para. 48).

3. Acceptability

53. States must take all appropriate measures to ensure that support programmes

incorporate a rights-based approach, are provided on a voluntary basis and respect the

rights and dignity of persons with disabilities. All support services and arrangements must

be culturally appropriate; sensitive to gender, impairment and life-cycle requirements; and

designed to respect the privacy of those concerned. Community-based approaches for the

provision of support constitute an effective strategy to ensure the provision of responses

that take into account geographical, social, economic and cultural issues.

54. States must ensure that the support made available is of good quality. This requires,

inter alia, the implementation of person-centred approaches and the adoption of guidelines

and criteria to regulate the delivery of assistance and support services, including standards

for training and certification. States should also train and assist families and communities

providing informal support, set up monitoring mechanisms to assess the adequacy of

support services and arrangements and prevent abuses and violence in its provision.

17 It is important to differentiate between the concept of accessibility as defined by the Committee on

Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which relates to the capacity of systems to ensure access to

services, and accessibility as a human rights principle as referred to in the Convention on the Rights

of Persons with Disabilities.

18 Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 19 (2007), para. 24.

4. Choice and control

55. States must design support services and arrangements so that they enable direct

choice and control by persons with disabilities. Existing services often do not comply with

this standard. In many instances the decisions of users can be overridden by professionals

and family members. States must guarantee to persons with disabilities the opportunity to

plan and direct their own support: who provides it and how, and whether it is provided in

disability-specific services or in services offered to the general public. The denial or

restriction of legal capacity, a widespread human rights violation worldwide, has a direct

impact on the possibility for persons with disabilities to exercise choice and control over

the support they receive and contributes to the imposition of services that are contrary to

their dignity and rights.

56. Individual funding is a suitable way to ensure choice and control by persons with

disabilities. Personalized schemes allow persons with disabilities to hire support directly,

either from formal service providers or informal carers, or a combination of both. In this

way, persons with disabilities can decide who provides them support and the type and level

of support they wish to receive, and thus are much more empowered to ensure that they will

receive adequate support. The implementation of such schemes should not, however, result

in States relinquishing their primary responsibility to ensure access to appropriate support

for persons with disabilities. On the contrary, States have a significant role to play in its

management and monitoring.

V. Ensuring access to support for persons with disabilities

A. General State obligations

1. Legal and policy frameworks

57. States must establish legal and policy frameworks that ensure that support services

and arrangements, including assistive technologies, are available, accessible, adequate and

affordable. Many national legal frameworks do not include support services at all, or only

for the exercise of certain rights (e.g., inclusive education or mobility). Moreover, when

legislation does consider these services, States often do not have the appropriate policies

and programmes in place to ensure implementation. States should review existing

legislation and policies on support to ensure that they are compatible with the requirements

of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

58. States should also consider establishing a comprehensive system to coordinate the

effective access to support of persons with disabilities. The system should be anchored in

the human rights-based approach to disability; take into account equality between men and

women and the rights of the most disadvantaged and marginalized groups; and cover all

support needs across all sectors of society throughout one or more schemes, formal and

informal. Such a system could bring coherence and coordination across programmes, actors

and levels of government responsible for the provision of support. Within this system,

States should take all appropriate legislative, administrative, social, educational and other

measures to protect persons with disabilities from all forms of exploitation, violence and

abuse, including their gender-based aspects. States should also consider integrating as many

assistance and support services as possible into their existing mainstream policies and

programmes. Persons with disabilities and their representative organizations should

participate in all decision-making processes concerning this system, including design,

implementation and monitoring.

59. Decentralizing the provision of support is a major challenge for many States.

Contributions to the present report illustrate that where responsibility for the provision of

support has been delegated to regional or local authorities, support is often underfunded and

fragmented, allowing for regional disparities and inequitable access within the country.

This situation gives persons with disabilities little certainty and limited choice of or control

over support services and arrangements. States should enhance their internal coordination

mechanisms to address support needs in a comprehensive manner, ensure that regional and

local authorities receive adequate budget, and implement and monitor the provision of

support services effectively. Persons with disabilities should be able to retain the support

they receive when they move to another region in their country.

2. Service delivery arrangements

60. Support is usually delivered by a mixture of providers, including State agencies,

private organizations, non-profit organizations, charities and families. In high- and middle-

income countries, States have traditionally been the main source of formal support, either

through their centralized health-care or social protection systems or through local

authorities. In many cases, States fund and contract non-profit organizations and private

organizations to carry out these interventions. In low-income countries, charities and

international non-governmental organizations are the main providers of formal support,

often with limited sustainability and low standards of quality. Regardless of the type of

service delivery arrangement, States have an obligation to ensure that persons with

disabilities have access to and receive quality services and adequate support, including

when service provision is delegated to non-profit organizations and private actors. In such

cases, States must adopt a comprehensive regulatory and monitoring framework that

involves a due diligence obligation.

61. In the light of article 19 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with

Disabilities, States must adopt a community-based approach to the provision of support,

either directly or through intermediaries. Such an approach enables stakeholders — family,

friends, neighbours, peers and others — to play a significant role in supporting persons with

disabilities in daily life activities and participating in the community. This allows the

provision of culturally sensitive services in the communities where persons with disabilities

live, building on existing social networks and community resources. In the case of

indigenous peoples, for example, community-based approaches could reduce the risk of

assimilation. When services are not made available within the community, there is limited

participation by persons with disabilities in their design and provision, and there is an

increased risk of segregation and institutionalization. Importantly, by benefiting from local

skills and resources, community participation in the provision of support facilitates the

optimal and efficient delivery of services, enabling a cost-effective policy response in

countries with limited resources.

62. In recent decades, many high- and middle-income countries have shifted their

support policies towards personalization, to enable persons with disabilities to hire the

support they require within the existing market. Different models of personalization have

been implemented, including direct payments and personal budgets. While these models

can potentially empower persons with disabilities, States need to adopt a set of measures to

enhance their effectiveness. Such measures include, for instance, building the capacities of

beneficiaries to manage their own funding and support (including supported decision-

making); having a wide range of providers that respond to the diversity of support needs,

particularly for those who live in rural and remote areas; preventing precariousness in the

work conditions of supporters; and avoiding channelling personal budgets through the

family rather than directly to the persons with disabilities, and the feminization of support.19

It is important to note that allowances that are paid directly to “informal carers” of adults

with disabilities can compromise the capacity of persons with disabilities to exercise choice

and control over their support. Support to families should never replace support to

individuals.

3. Participation and collaboration

63. Persons with disabilities and their representative organizations must participate in all

decision-making processes related to the design, implementation, monitoring and

evaluation of support services and arrangements. Persons with disabilities know best what

type of support they require and the barriers they face in accessing it. The Convention on

the Rights of Persons with Disabilities explicitly requires States to consult closely with and

actively involve persons with disabilities, including children with disabilities, in the

development and implementation of legislation and policies concerning issues relating to

them (art. 4 (3)). The Special Rapporteur’s thematic study on the right of persons with

disabilities to participate in decision-making (A/HRC/31/62) provides specific guidance in

this regard.

64. States should promote collaboration and partnerships between public authorities and

civil society organizations, including representative organizations of persons with

disabilities, in the area of provision of support, particularly at the subnational and

operational levels. In this way, support systems can benefit from the outreach capacity of

organizations of persons with disabilities, their knowledge of local contexts and their

mobilization and advocacy capacity. For instance, in Kenya the Government funds

organizations of persons with psychosocial disabilities to run peer support groups in seven

counties that facilitate support for decision-making and community living.

4. Non-discrimination

65. States must ensure that all persons with disabilities enjoy equal access to quality

support without discrimination. Public and private service providers and agencies cannot

deny access to support on the basis of disability, whether directly or indirectly, and they

must ensure the provision of reasonable accommodation to all those who may require it.

States should review all eligibility criteria and assessments from a human rights perspective

to ensure they are not discriminatory, in line with the recommendations included in the

Special Rapporteur’s thematic study on the right of persons with disabilities to social

protection (A/70/297).

66. States must abolish discriminatory practices in the provision of support. For

instance, many States continue to rely on institutional and residential care and provide

support services predominantly in those settings. Furthermore, the existence of

guardianship and other substitute decision-making regimes present great challenges for

persons with disabilities in accessing support services. These practices not only deprive

them of the possibility to choose their supports, but also contribute to perpetuating their

isolation, forced treatment and institutionalization. States should not bundle access to

support with such requirements as accepting certain residential arrangements or undergoing

medical treatment. Stigma and discrimination also have a negative impact on access to

support services by persons with disabilities. Misconceptions about them often result in

19 Evidence also shows that, if well designed, personalization schemes can increase the protection of

those who provide support, both in the formal and informal sector. See Kirstein Rummery, “A

comparative analysis of personalisation: balancing an ethic of care with user empowerment”, Ethics

and Social Welfare, vol. 5, No. 2 (2011), pp. 138-152.

hiding persons with disabilities at home, and even attacks against them, such as in the case

of persons with albinism. Consequently, many persons with disabilities fail to receive the

necessary support and instead survive in dire conditions.

5. Sustainability

67. The sustainability of support services and arrangements represents a major

challenge in both developing and developed countries. Whereas in most low-income

countries support is funded and provided mainly by families, charities and international

non-governmental organizations, many high- and middle-income countries are reducing

their direct public investment in support and are turning to non-profit organizations and

community networks to take charge of these services. States usually invoke the scarcity of

resources and economic difficulties to justify their failure to provide support services and

arrangements to persons with disabilities.

68. States have an obligation to mobilize resources to their maximum availability to

ensure access to support for persons with disabilities. Earmarked funds aimed at covering

support, close collaboration and engagement with civil society and increasing efficiency

can contribute to greater sustainability of support systems. Participatory budgeting

processes, when they are inclusive of persons with disabilities, can also help to expand the

allocation of public funds to support persons with disabilities. Social protection systems can

also constitute a powerful strategy to facilitate access to support for persons with

disabilities (see A/70/297, paras. 4-9).

69. States must refrain from adopting retrogressive measures that affect their obligation

to ensure access to support for persons with disabilities. In times of crisis, more support is

needed, rather than cuts (ibid., para. 85). Reduction and caps on direct payments, personal

budgets and other benefits; stricter eligibility criteria; the elimination or reduction of

subsidies and tax credits; and reduced expenditures on community support services, such as

in-home services and personal assistance, affect the right to live independently and be

included in the community and to an adequate standard of living. States should ensure

sufficient resources for individual funds to enable persons with disabilities to access

appropriate support.

6. International cooperation

70. International cooperation can play a crucial role in the implementation of support

systems. Donor countries and international organizations should consider increasing

funding for the design and development of sustainable national support systems and

securing the necessary funds to implement development aid inclusive of the support

arrangements required by persons with disabilities. For example, when funding national

education systems, donors should take into account the obligation to provide support to

children and adolescents with disabilities within the general education system to facilitate

their effective education.

71. International cooperation must be consistent with the human rights of persons with

disabilities and provided in a sustainable and culturally appropriate manner. To this end,

international assistance should not support practices contrary to the human rights-based

approach to disability. International organizations, non-profit organizations, charities and

other organizations operating in national contexts should refrain from implementing

projects that are not sustainable or that violate the rights of persons with disabilities, such as

“care homes” and special schools.

72. The United Nations, including all its programmes, funds and specialized agencies,

should increase the awareness and expertise of its staff on the implementation of support

systems to be able to cooperate more effectively with States, including through technical

guidance, information and capacity-building.

7. Accountability and monitoring

73. States must monitor effectively the access of persons with disabilities to appropriate

support. For that purpose, States should build, within their national legal and policy

frameworks, clear accountability mechanisms, with indicators and benchmarks for

measuring the accountability of State authorities. The governmental focal points and

coordination mechanisms for the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of

Persons with Disabilities, as required by its article 33 (1), should be considered as the

mechanisms for overseeing implementation. To prevent the occurrence of all forms of

exploitation, violence and abuse in the provision of support, States must ensure independent

monitoring of all the facilities and programmes that provide services to persons with

disabilities as well as the establishment of appropriate and effective safeguards.

74. Persons with disabilities should have access to effective judicial or other appropriate

remedies when States fail to meet their obligation to ensure access. Similarly, States must

guarantee that all persons with disabilities who have experienced any form of exploitation,

violence or abuse in the context of support received have access to justice and effective

remedies. These remedies should include adequate reparations, including restitution,

compensation, satisfaction and guarantees of non-repetition, as appropriate. National

human rights institutions and independent mechanisms to promote, protect and monitor the

implementation of the Convention should be mandated to carry out inquiries and

investigations (art. 33 (2)) as well as provide assistance to persons with disabilities in

accessing legal remedies.

B. Obligations related to specific types of support

75. There is a diversity of forms of support services and arrangements for persons with

disabilities. These include, but are not limited to, the different types of support measures

described in the following paragraphs. While the classification is useful for identifying

specific obligations and particularities, in practice most forms of support overlap in

significant ways.

1. Decision-making

76. Some persons with disabilities may want support to make decisions, hence to

exercise their legal capacity. The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

explicitly recognizes that States have an obligation to provide persons with disabilities with

access to support in the exercise of their legal capacity (art. 12 (3)). States must replace

regimes of substitute decision-making with regimes of supported decision-making that

respect the rights, will and preferences of persons with disabilities, such as support

agreements, peer support groups, self-advocacy support and advance directives, among

others. In its general comment No. 1 (2014) on equal recognition before the law, the

Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities provides guidance on how to ensure

access to support in decision-making.

77. Since the adoption of the Convention, it is encouraging to note that many countries,

including Argentina, Costa Rica, Czechia and Ireland, have revised their legal frameworks

to recognize the right of persons with disabilities to access support to exercise legal

capacity. In order to uphold a real paradigm shift, the implementation of supported

decision-making systems must be accompanied by the abolishment of all substitute

decision-making regimes.

2. Communication

78. Some persons with disabilities may need support to overcome barriers that limit

their ability to communicate and be understood. While the provision of accessible

information and communication can reduce the need for support of persons with

disabilities, many of them may still require support with communication. The situation of

children with disabilities with limited or no speech capacity is particularly alarming, since

their communication needs are usually neglected within the education system and in their

communities, despite the existence of low-cost resources and materials. In this regard,

States must take all appropriate measures to ensure that persons with disabilities, whatever

their communication skills or type of impairment, can access the communication support

they need through different forms of communication, as defined in article 2 of the

Convention. This includes professional sign language interpretation, display of text, Braille,

tactile communication, large print and accessible multimedia, as well as written, audio,

plain-language, human-reader and augmentative and alternative modes, means and formats

of communication, including accessible information and communications technology.

79. Contributions to the present report illustrate different ways in which States provide

support in the area of communication. For example, Cuba has certified 455 sign language

interpreters who work in coordination with the National Association of the Deaf, the

Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Higher Education, while Colombia has set up an

online relay centre that facilitates the communication of deaf persons with anyone in the

country through interpretation services. Deaf persons can also learn to use information and

communications technology and be trained as interpreters.

3. Mobility

80. A variety of persons with disabilities may require support to ensure their personal

mobility with the greatest possible independence, including through mobility aids, devices

and assistive technologies and forms of live assistance and intermediaries. In particular,

persons with disabilities who live in rural and remote areas face significant challenges in

accessing different forms of mobility support, which significantly limits their access to such

basic services as health care and education.

81. Article 20 of the Convention requires States to facilitate the personal mobility of

persons with disabilities in the manner and at the time of their choice, facilitate their access

to assistive technologies and forms of mobility assistance and intermediaries, and provide

training in mobility skills to persons with disabilities and staff working with them. It also

encourages entities that produce mobility aids, devices and assistive technologies to take

into account all aspects of mobility for persons with disabilities. The Special Rapporteur’s

thematic report on disability-inclusive policies (A/71/314) provides guidance to States on

how to establish a policy framework that ensures access to assistive devices and

technologies to persons with disabilities.

4. Personal assistance

82. States have an obligation to ensure that persons with disabilities have access to the

personal assistance necessary to support living and inclusion in the community, as provided

by article 19 (b) of the Convention. Personal assistance encompasses a broad range of

arrangements designed to assist a person with disabilities to perform daily activities,

including getting up, bathing, dressing, getting ready for work, going out, cooking, cleaning

and shopping. Persons with disabilities may require personal assistance for different lengths

of time, from full time to a few hours a week, depending on their individual needs.

83. Independent living centres and representative organizations of persons with

disabilities can play an important role in ensuring access to personal assistance. They can

disseminate information about the obligations of States and service providers, provide

assistance in recruitment and budgeting, facilitate support groups and train those who wish

to become assistants. They can also foster participatory processes for developing ethical

principles and practice guidance. While personal assistants may not require specialized

preparation, States should ensure they have adequate training in order to provide safe and

quality support. For example, in the Republic of Korea, the Act on Personal Assistance

Services for Persons with Disabilities specifies the qualifications, human resources and

service providers relating to the provision of personal assistance.

5. Living independently in the community

84. Under article 19 (2) of the Convention States are required to ensure access to a range

of in-home, residential and other community support services for persons with disabilities.

The ultimate aim of this provision is to support living and inclusion in the community, and

to prevent isolation or segregation from the community. Persons with disabilities should

have the opportunity to choose where and with whom to live, and not be obliged to live in a

particular living arrangement such as psychiatric hospitals, nursing homes or other

institutions. Moreover, States have an obligation to facilitate the transition of persons with

disabilities from those facilities to home- and community-based residences and to provide

urgent aid to persons with disabilities who are at risk of becoming homeless or being

institutionalized.

85. Persons with psychosocial disabilities can benefit significantly from community

support services. Peer support, for example, is an effective tool to support people

experiencing severe emotional distress and prevent coercion in mental health services, as

well as providing them with community-based support. In the case of persons with

albinism, the provision of adequate housing and community support are essential protection

measures to prevent abductions and attacks. Contributions to the present report show a

growing interest on the part of States in community support. In Chile, for example, the

State created a programme that funds civil society organizations to provide support services

for independent living. During its first year of existence, 40 projects were financed in 13 of

the 15 regions of the country.

86. States should close all group living arrangement for persons with disabilities of any

size that do not allow residents to participate in the community on an equal basis with

others. In particular, States must establish an immediate moratorium on new admissions to

institutions and set up a policy framework to guide deinstitutionalization processes. This

framework should include the adoption of a plan of action with clear timelines and concrete

benchmarks, the redistribution of public funds from institutions to community services and

the development of adequate community support for persons with disabilities such as

housing assistance, home support, peer support and respite services. Evidence shows that,

when adequately planned and resourced, community services are much more cost-effective

than institutional care.20

6. General services

87. General services, such as education, employment, justice and health, as well as other

community services and social protection programmes, must consider the provision of

support to persons with disabilities. Similarly, programmes to end domestic violence should

include appropriate forms of gender- and age-sensitive assistance and support for girls and

women with disabilities. States should budget and plan for such measures when designing

20 WHO and World Bank, World Report on Disability, p. 149.

policies and programmes to ensure that support for persons with disabilities is available

from the start.

88. Consideration of persons with disabilities in national policies on adequate housing is

essential to ensure community participation. In the Republic of Moldova, as part of the

process of deinstitutionalization of persons with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities,

the Government has introduced protected housing arrangements, where persons with

disabilities are provided social housing and the support necessary for living independently

in the community (see A/HRC/31/62/Add.2, para. 46).

89. Partnerships and alliances with non-profit organizations, academia and organizations

of persons with disabilities can increase the capacity of general services to ensure access to

support for persons with disabilities. For example, in South Africa, the University of

Pretoria has provided research and training to different national authorities on how to

ensure access to justice for persons with disabilities through augmentative and alternative

communication support as well as direct services to that end.

VI. Conclusions and recommendations

90. Guaranteeing access to support for persons with disabilities is not only a

human rights obligation for States, but also an essential condition to ensure that no

one is left behind in the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable

Development. Even if we advance in the areas of accessibility and non-discrimination,

persons with disabilities will always need to have access to support. In fact, without

appropriate support to carry out daily activities and participate in society, many

persons with disabilities will not be able to exercise their human rights and

fundamental freedoms, and will remain at risk of abuse and institutionalization.

Support measures are vital to enable persons with disabilities to benefit from all

policies and programmes and to live fully in the community on an equal basis with

others. States should guarantee the full and equal enjoyment of human rights and

fundamental freedoms of persons with disabilities in the provision of support.

91. The Special Rapporteur makes the following recommendations to States with

the aim of assisting them in developing and implementing support arrangements and

services for persons with disabilities. States should:

(a) Recognize in domestic legislation the obligation to provide access to

different forms of support to persons with disabilities to carry out daily activities and

participate in society;

(b) Implement a comprehensive system across different sectors and levels of

government to ensure that persons with disabilities have access to community-based

support services and arrangements that are available, accessible, adequate and

affordable;

(c) Guarantee that all national policies and programmes take into account

and allocate budgets for support services and arrangements for persons with

disabilities;

(d) Ensure that social protection systems include the provision of access to

different forms of support for persons with disabilities, including the provision of free

access to essential assistive technologies, as part of the States health coverage and

social protection schemes;

(e) Ensure access by persons with disabilities to appropriate support in their

communities, regardless of the type of service delivery arrangement. When available,

individual funding should enable persons with disabilities to effectively access support

of appropriate quality;

(f) Design support systems so that they enable direct choice and control to

be exercised by persons with disabilities;

(g) Ensure that eligibility criteria for accessing support do not discriminate

against persons with disabilities on any grounds and that disability assessments, when

established, take into consideration the barriers affecting a persons participation and

not only her or his impairment;

(h) Adopt a plan of action with clear timelines and concrete benchmarks for

the deinstitutionalization of persons with disabilities, including a moratorium on new

admissions to institutions;

(i) Ensure appropriate safeguards at and independent monitoring of all

public and private facilities and programmes providing support to persons with

disabilities;

(j) Actively involve and consult with persons with disabilities and their

representative organizations in all decision-making processes related to the provision

of access to support;

(k) Progressively increase the allocation of funds to ensure access to support

for persons with disabilities and refrain from adopting any retrogressive measures

that directly or indirectly affect the access of persons with disabilities to support;

(l) Encourage international cooperation actors, including international non-

profit organizations, to carry out research on and provide funding and technical

assistance for the provision of support for persons with disabilities, and refrain from

implementing or supporting projects that contravene the Convention on the Rights of

Persons with Disabilities.

92. The Special Rapporteur also recommends that the United Nations, including all

its programmes, funds and specialized agencies, adequately consider the obligation to

ensure access to support for persons with disabilities in all its work, including when

assisting States in the implementation of mainstream policies and programmes, and to

increase its capacities to provide technical guidance in this regard.