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Is the right to education for children with disabilities in South Africa sufficiently protected, promoted and supported by the government?

Disability in South Africa is a complex issue to understand and address. Society is structured in such a way that ableism persists, creating ongoing challenges for minority groups such as those living with a disability. In the light of the above, this dissertation examines the right to education for...

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Main Author: Mycroft, Michaela
Other Authors: De Vos, Pierre
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Law 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mycroft, Michaela
author2 De Vos, Pierre
author_browse De Vos, Pierre
Mycroft, Michaela
author_facet De Vos, Pierre
Mycroft, Michaela
author_sort Mycroft, Michaela
collection Thesis
description Disability in South Africa is a complex issue to understand and address. Society is structured in such a way that ableism persists, creating ongoing challenges for minority groups such as those living with a disability. In the light of the above, this dissertation examines the right to education for children with disabilities. This dissertation has a narrowed focus, through a desktop study investigating legislation and policies addressing and supporting the right to education in South Africa. If the right to education is effectively addressed, it could lead to improved access to equality, dignity and freedom for children with disabilities, as enshrined in the Constitution. Civil society organisations have become increasingly involved in supporting and promoting the right to education for children with disabilities, to ensure that children with disabilities can and do access their basic rights, when government fails to provide for equitable realisation of this right. I propose that the government has accepted responsibility to meet its obligation1 to provide equal education opportunities for children with disabilities in South Africa through signing international and regional treaties but is ineffective in doing so. However, the pervasiveness of ableism is a major barrier to implement this obligation. As a result institutions such as civil society have been ‘required’ to fill the gap to avoid further marginalisation of children with disabilities and violation of their human rights.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:52.071Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30876 Is the right to education for children with disabilities in South Africa sufficiently protected, promoted and supported by the government? Mycroft, Michaela De Vos, Pierre Human Rights Law Disability in South Africa is a complex issue to understand and address. Society is structured in such a way that ableism persists, creating ongoing challenges for minority groups such as those living with a disability. In the light of the above, this dissertation examines the right to education for children with disabilities. This dissertation has a narrowed focus, through a desktop study investigating legislation and policies addressing and supporting the right to education in South Africa. If the right to education is effectively addressed, it could lead to improved access to equality, dignity and freedom for children with disabilities, as enshrined in the Constitution. Civil society organisations have become increasingly involved in supporting and promoting the right to education for children with disabilities, to ensure that children with disabilities can and do access their basic rights, when government fails to provide for equitable realisation of this right. I propose that the government has accepted responsibility to meet its obligation1 to provide equal education opportunities for children with disabilities in South Africa through signing international and regional treaties but is ineffective in doing so. However, the pervasiveness of ableism is a major barrier to implement this obligation. As a result institutions such as civil society have been ‘required’ to fill the gap to avoid further marginalisation of children with disabilities and violation of their human rights. 2020-02-06T07:41:04Z 2020-02-06T07:41:04Z 2019 2020-02-04T09:58:22Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30876 eng application/pdf Department of Public Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Human Rights Law
Mycroft, Michaela
Is the right to education for children with disabilities in South Africa sufficiently protected, promoted and supported by the government?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Is the right to education for children with disabilities in South Africa sufficiently protected, promoted and supported by the government?
title_full Is the right to education for children with disabilities in South Africa sufficiently protected, promoted and supported by the government?
title_fullStr Is the right to education for children with disabilities in South Africa sufficiently protected, promoted and supported by the government?
title_full_unstemmed Is the right to education for children with disabilities in South Africa sufficiently protected, promoted and supported by the government?
title_short Is the right to education for children with disabilities in South Africa sufficiently protected, promoted and supported by the government?
title_sort is the right to education for children with disabilities in south africa sufficiently protected promoted and supported by the government
topic Human Rights Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30876
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