Access to post-secondary Education in Canada for students with disabilities

Laverne Jacobs
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

In Canada, access to post-secondary education is guaranteed by a number of domestic instruments. These instruments are: statutory human rights legislation, constitutional law, and accessibility legislation. These guarantees are further bolstered by Article 24 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). Statutory human rights legislation (or anti-discrimination law) plays the most extensive role in controlling the discretionary power that colleges and universities exercise with respect to the admission of prospective students and the reasonable accommodation of matriculated students with disabilities. This article presents the findings of a review of decisions by human rights tribunals in Canada over the 7-year period of 2014–2021. With respect to both admissions cases and in-program reasonable accommodations cases, it identifies the main types of barriers experienced by persons with disabilities. It also examines the ways in which accessibility legislation, a proactive standard-setting form of legislation in Canada, has sought to improve access to post-secondary students with disabilities, focusing on Ontario’s post-secondary education accessibility standards as an example. Finally, it argues that changes to policies and practices on the ground that draw more inspiration from Article 24 of the CRPD will help to ensure that the equality right to post-secondary education for students with disabilities is fulfilled in letter and spirit.
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加拿大残疾学生接受中学后教育的机会
在加拿大,一些国内文书保障了接受中学后教育的机会。这些文书是:法定人权立法、宪法和无障碍立法。《联合国残疾人权利公约》第24条进一步加强了这些保障。法定人权立法(或反歧视法)在控制学院和大学在录取准学生和合理录取残疾学生方面行使的自由裁量权方面发挥着最广泛的作用。本文介绍了加拿大人权法庭在2014-2011年7年期间对裁决的审查结果。关于入院案例和方案内合理住宿案例,它确定了残疾人遇到的主要障碍类型。它还审查了无障碍立法作为加拿大一种积极制定标准的立法形式,如何努力改善残疾中学后学生的入学机会,并以安大略省的中学后教育无障碍标准为例。最后,它认为,从《残疾人权利公约》第24条中汲取更多灵感的政策和做法的改变将有助于确保残疾学生平等接受中学后教育的权利在文字和精神上得到实现。
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CiteScore
1.50
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0.00%
发文量
23
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