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Slide 1
Europe and Me
Slide 2
Giving us equal rights? The European Union
Slide 3
Disabled Access
Slide 4
Slide 5
Anna can hardly wait for the concert
Slide 6
She phones her friends to see if they want to go with her
Slide 7
Slide 8
They travel across the border into the country next door.
Slide 9
It is not easy being in a wheelchair there
Slide 10
Slide 11
There is no disabled transport available
Slide 12
Wheelchair access is right at the top
Slide 13
Slide 14
How can we make things more equal?
Slide 15
Percentage of GDP spending on disability benefits Source:
Eurostat
Slide 16
Did you know? In 1998 the Minister for Sport in the UK
Government produced guidelines on numbers of wheelchair spaces at
football stadiums. Ten years later, in 2008, the Sun newspaper
reported that eighteen out of 20 Premier League clubs were still
providing too few places for wheelchair fans. The Sun drew up a
disabled places league listing the best providers. The top three
were: Hull City Blackburn Rovers Arsenal
Slide 17
Did you know? There are over 50 million disabled people in the
European Union. This represents about 10% of the population, the
equivalent of the total populations of Belgium, the Czech Republic,
Greece, Hungary and the Netherlands together Disabled people in the
EU are two to three times more likely to be unemployed than
non-disabled people One third of the disabled population of the EU
has never travelled abroad or even gone on a day excursion to
another country.
Slide 18
Did you know? At the moment, policy on disabled people in the
EU is left up to the Member States. But the EU has taken a number
of measures to defend the rights of people with disabilities
including: the Employment Equality Directive which prohibits
discrimination against people with disabilities and others in the
labour market and in the workplace setting up a High Level Group on
Disability, made up of Member States and NGO representatives, to
act as a forum for discussion and cooperation forum. setting up a
Disability Unit to make sure that disability issues are considered
in all EU policy and law making, i.e., disability mainstreaming
held a European Year of People with Disabilities in 2003.
Slide 19
Did you know? The European Disability Forum is an independent
body that represents the interests of over 50 million disabled
citizens in Europe. Its mission is to make sure that disabled
people have full access to fundamental and human rights across
Europe It does this by trying to influence EU disability law and
policy proposals It has collected over one million signatures
across the EU in favour of bringing in EU-wide laws to give
disabled people equality with non- disabled people.
Slide 20
Did you know? The EU has taken a number of measures to increase
gender equality including: separate laws on sex discrimination
prohibiting unequal pay for men and women gender mainstreaming,
i.e., making sure that gender equality is built into all the work
of the EU.
Slide 21
Did you know? The European Convention on Human Rights is a list
of human rights and fundamental freedoms established by the Council
of Europe It was inspired by the UN Declaration of Human Rights and
was signed in Rome in 1950 Citizens of countries that have signed
up to the Convention may bring cases against their own governments
in the Court of Human Rights if they think their human rights under
the Convention have been breached All EU Member States and
applicant countries have signed the Convention.