The social model of disability : a matter of human rights
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/rduned.12.2013.11716Keywords:
disability’s social model, human rights, universal accessibility, discrimination, social barriersAbstract
The social model of disability is presented as a new paradigm of the recent disability treatment, that has had theoretical and legal current development. It is a model that considers that the origins of disability are not either religious or scientific, but social in a great measure. From this new perspective, it is emphasized that the population with disability can contribute to the society in the same circumstances that the rest of the population, which integrates the society, all this from a valorization of the inclusion perspective and respect of diversity. This model is closely related with certain essential values which underline the Human Rights, such as human dignity, individual freedom and equality; all these conduce to a decrease of barriers and lead to a social inclusion that sets basis to principles as: personal autonomy, nondiscrimination, universal accessibility, environmental normalization, civil dialogue, inter alia. The premise is that disability is part of a social construction, and it is not the deficiency what prevents people with a disability to access or not to a particular social sphere, but the obstacles and barriers created by the society itself what limits and prevents people with disability to be included, to decide or to design autonomously their own life plan with opportunity equality.