Swiss Disability And Development Consortium

SDDC

Swiss Disability and
Development Consortium

SDDC is a Swiss based network advocating for the rights and inclusion of persons with disabilities in Switzerland's international cooperation.

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Factsheet: Disability Marker application by Switzerland

Di Chantal Baumgarten | 14 Gennaio 2022 | 0 Commenti

Switzerland started applying the OECD DAC disability policy marker in 2018. The disability marker is a statistical tool of the OECD, which allows OECD countries to assess to what extent their projects and programmes are disability inclusive. It also gives an overview of much funding is dedicated to disability inclusion.

In 2019, 3% of all Swiss development projects aimed to be disability inclusive. The Factsheet provides an analysis of the application of the marker by Switzerland thus far, and makes some recommendations to ensure the consistent, comprehensive and quality marking of projects.

The Disability Marker Factsheet can be accessed here.

Alternative Report on List of Issues for the CRPD Review of Switzerland

Di Chantal Baumgarten | 10 Gennaio 2022 | 0 Commenti

The Swiss Disability and Development Consortium (SDDC) officially submitted an Alternative Report to the UN-CRPD Committee, in view of the upcoming Review of Switzerland on the 9th and 10th of March, 2022. The report provides an alternative view on the official response by the Swiss Government on the List of Issues submitted on 25 September 2020. It highlights some key gaps where CRPD implementation in Swiss international cooperation and humanitarian action is still lacking.

The report outlines five recommended Concluding Observations for consideration by the CRPD Committee. These recommendations relate to Articles 6 (women with disabilities), 11 (situations of risk and humanitarian emergencies), 31 (statistics and data collection) and 32 (international cooperation) of the Convention.

The Alternative Report can be accessed here.

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Key Messages

How can Switzerland ensure the rights of persons with disabilities in the Global South?

1

No guidelines, no priority. Switzerland needs guidelines to inform its work on the inclusion of persons with disabilities in its international cooperation. Current efforts on disability inclusion are small scale, ad-hoc and mostly segregating.

2

Nothing about us, without us! Switzerland must ensure the full and active participation of persons with disabilities throughout all processes affecting them, including in its international cooperation. Arrangements must be made to enable their participation.

3

What isn’t counted, doesn’t count. Switzerland has committed itself to be a leader on data collection, but it is not systematically collecting and disaggregating data on disability in its international programmes.

4

Leave no one behind in humanitarian crises. Persons with disabilities are disproportionately affected in humanitarian crises. Switzerland committed itself to making its humanitarian action inclusive of persons with disabilities, but it is not clear how it is living up to its commitment.

5

What isn’t budgeted for, doesn’t get done. Switzerland must sufficiently budget for the inclusion of persons with disabilities in its international cooperation and must commit itself not to finance programs and services that segregate persons with disabilities from the community.

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