Professor Emerita Arlene Kanter recently spent a week in Berlin meeting with government officials and disability organizations to promote the development of disability laws and policies in Germany. Kanter’s visit was sponsored by the U.S. Department of State.
Kanter met with U.S. Embassy Deputy Chief of Mission Clark Price, Federal Government Commissioner for the Affairs of People with Disabilities Jürgen Dusel, and MdB Heike Heubach, the first Deaf member of the German Parliament, to discuss eliminating barriers that prevent disabled children and adults from participating in German society.
Kanter also visited the T4-Memorial to honor the victims of the Holocaust who were murdered by the Nazis because of their disability.
A roundtable discussion with over 50 representatives from local disability organizations as well as a separate roundtable with Embassy staff sparked lively conversations about access to higher education, discrimination in the workplace, efforts to combat violence against women with disabilities, the need for community-based alternatives to institutions, as well as how to develop laws and policies to conform to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), which Germany ratified in 2009.
“Germany has made significant progress since it ratified the CRPD, by adopting new disability-related laws and policies. But more work needs to be done to implement these laws, especially in the areas of accessibility of private facilities, education, and workplace accommodations. As one who helped to draft the CRPD, it is meaningful for me to see this critical work of promoting greater disability inclusion being embraced by leaders within and outside the government of Germany,” says Kanter.