• Peru’s decision to restore voting rights to thousands of people with disabilities is an important step toward ensuring their full participation in society.  More than 23,000 people with mental and intellectual disabilities had been excluded from the voter registry for the 2011 presidential elections in April and June based on previous government policy. 

Featured Content

  • Across the world, many of the world's one billion individuals with disabilities struggle for access to education and employment, for the right to live in the community instead of being locked up in institutions, to express their sexuality and have children, and to participate in political and social life. Individuals with physical and mental disabilities often face increased violence and discrimination, yet they remain invisible in their communities.

Reports

Disability Rights

  • Mar 9, 2012
    An alarming number of women and girls with disabilities have been, and continue to be, denied their rights to experience their sexuality, to have sexual relationships and to found and maintain families through the practice of forced sterilization.
  • Jan 22, 2012
    Governments around the world should reform laws that limit the capacity of people with disabilities to vote, to make independent decisions, or to live in the community, Human Rights Watch said today in an essay in its World Report 2012.
  • Dec 22, 2011
    Jamaican authorities should take prompt action to ensure that people with disabilities can vote in the elections on December 29, 2011, Human Rights Watch said today.
  • Dec 20, 2011
    This submission is based on research and advocacy conducted by Human Rights Watch. Women and girls with disabilities face a heightened risk of physical and sexual violence. Many factors contribute to this risk, including limitations in physical mobility, isolation, and common myths about women and girls with disabilities.
  • Nov 11, 2011
  • Nov 10, 2011
    Across the globe, women and girls with disabilities are particularly vulnerable to forced sterilizations performed under the auspices of legitimate medical care or the consent of others in their name. The practice of forced sterilization is part of a broader pattern of denial of the human rights, including reproductive rights of women and girls with disabilities.
  • Oct 17, 2011
    This submission highlights areas of concern we hope will inform your consideration of violations of Article 29 of the CRPD. It documents legal restrictions on the right of persons with disabilities to vote and stand for election, including the laws that deprive them of their legal capacity to make decisions. It describes accessibility barriers that effectively lead to the denial of the right to vote, as well as limitations that may prevent persons with disabilities from running for public office. This submission also presents positive examples of how some countries have implemented this right, and recommendations for States parties to the CRPD. The following information is based on our research and advocacy efforts in a number of countries around the world and ongoing monitoring of the human rights of persons with disabilities.
  • Oct 17, 2011

    Peru’s decision to restore voting rights to thousands of people with disabilities is an important step toward ensuring their full participation in society.  More than 23,000 people with mental and intellectual disabilities had been excluded from the voter registry for the 2011 presidential elections in April and June based on previous government policy. 

  • Oct 14, 2011
    Landon K., a 6-year-old boy with autism, was in first grade in a Mississippi elementary school when the 300-pound assistant principal picked up an inch-thick paddle and started hitting Landon on the buttocks. His grandmother, Jacquelyn K., told me: “My child just lost it ... he was screaming and hollering ... it just devastated him.”
  • Oct 11, 2011
    Police and local militia in Vientiane, the capital of Lao PDR, are forcibly detaining people who use drugs in a so-called treatment center where they risk beatings and other abuse, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Homeless people, street children, people with mental disabilities, and others deemed “undesirable” are often detained in the center as well, Human Rights watch said.