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Disability Rights Commission: From Civil Rights to Social Rights
Authors:Agnes Fletcher  Nick O'Brien
Institution:1. Freelance consultant (former Director of Policy and Communications of the DRC). agnes.fletcher1@googlemail.com;2. Liverpool Law School, University of Liverpool, Chatham Street, Liverpool L69 7ZS, England former Legal Director of the DRC). nick.obrien@ntlworld.com
Abstract:This paper argues that, although originally conceived as part of the ‘civil rights’ agenda, the development of disability rights in Britain by the Disability Rights Commission (DRC) is better seen as a movement towards the realization of social, economic, and cultural rights, and so as reaffirmation of the indissolubility of human rights in the round. As such, that process of development represents a concrete exercise in the implementation of social rights by a statutory equality body and a significant step towards the conception of disability rights as universal participation, not just individual or minority group entitlement. The paper considers the distinctive features of that regulatory activity. It asks what sort of equality the DRC set out to achieve for disabled people and where, as a result, its work positioned it on the regulatory spectrum. From the particular experience of the DRC, the paper looks forward to considerations of general relevance to other such bodies, including the new Equality and Human Rights Commission.
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