Abstract of A.S. Kanter lecture


“THE RIGHT TO LIVE IN THE COMMUNITY FOR PEOPLE WITH
DISABILITIES UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE LAWS OF
THE US AND ISRAEL.”

A.S. Kanter
Syracuse University, USA

This presentation explores the “right to live in the community” for
people with disabilities under international law, and the laws of the
United States and Israel. Article 19 of the Convention on the Right of
People with Disabilities (CRPD) guarantees all people with disabilities
“the right to live in the community, with choices equal to others.”
Similarly, the US Americans with Disabilities Act includes a specific
integration mandate which the United States Supreme Court, upheld
as a (limited) right to live in the community for people with disabilities.
In Israel, the Knesset also enacted a comprehensive disability law
which upholds the right of people with disabilities to live in the
community, but the Israeli Supreme Court recently decided a case
which, arguably, fails to fully enforce the right to community living
under Israeli Law. This presentation will examine the extent to which
the CRPD’s community living mandate can be realized both in the US
and in Israel. Professor Kanter argues for abandoning the concept of
 “community living” in favor of an explicit right of all people with
disabilities to not only live in the community, but to live in a home in a
community – either one’s own home or a home shared by others with
whom he or she chooses to live. The argument for this new right to
“live in a home within a community” therefore advances not only the
goals and requirements of the UN CRPD, but also US and Israeli
domestic disability laws and policies.


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