Pretoria University Law Press (PULP)

PULP is an open-access publisher based at the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria

Stop violence against people with disabilities: An international resource
Edited by Diane Nelson Bryen and Juan Bornman
2014
ISSN: 978-1-920538-29-3
Pages: 191
Print version: Available
Electronic version: Free PDF available

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About the publication

This book breaks new ground in ensuring access to the criminal justice system for one of the most vulnerable groups in the disability sphere: those individuals who have little or no functional speech. Their voices have been silent for too long.

The book provides an international perspective on violence against children and adults with disabilities. It focusses on promising practices and approaches to reduce the risks and occurrence of violence, intervention, access to justice, increase awareness, knowledge and understanding of the violence, rape and sexual abuse against people with disabilities, with an emphasis on people who have little or no functional speech.

Each chapter, written by an expert on disability and/or law and peer reviewed, contains extensive information, references, resources, manuals for practice, stories and reports of people with disabilities themselves confronting the violence they experienced. They also provide whatever data and statistics there are about the prevalence, the perpetrators, and access to justice.

The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) has been ratified in over 135 countries to date. Three articles from the CRPD that apply directly to the topic of violence against people with disabilities and their access to the criminal justice system are focal throughout the book.

About the editors:

Diane Nelson Bryen is Professor Emerita, Temple University, USA Extraordinary Professor, University of Pretoria, South Africa
Juan Bornman is Professor and Director, Centre for Augmentative and Alternative Communication, University of Pretoria, South Africa


Table of Contents

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
PREFACE
FOREWORD
CONTRIBUTORS
INTRODUCTION

  • 1. Securing freedom from fear and injustice within the justice system
  • 2. Ending the silence of violence: A view from the United States
  • 3. Accessing justice via key role players: A view from South Africa
  • 4. Silent revolution – violence against people with disability, who have little or no functional speech: A view from India
  • 5. Ending the violence: A view from Australia
  • 6. The right of people with disabilities to legal justice: A view from Israel
  • 7. Crime against persons with little or no functional speech: A view from the United Kingdom
  • 8. Testifying in court in the USA
  • 9. Using lessons learned to inform the future

Appendix A


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