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SRP
Story: Researching Disability to unpack MDGs
It is summer, October, 2009.
Twenty persons with various disabilities are winding up data management
trainingin Lusaka, Zambia. These are 10 young women and 10 young men
selected from 10 Southern Africa countries to learn generic,
self-directed research on disabilities. This research training will
continue in 2010.
Researching disabilities anywhere
in the world has proved a big challenge even to conventional
researchers. But this unique SAFOD Research Programme (SRP) marks the
beginning of the end to that challenge as stated by Director General of
SAFOD, Alexander Phiri:
“For some of you out there who
may not be aware, the objective of the SRP is – to build capacity (among
DPOs) to design, drive, own and use research to influence policy and
practice that responds to the particular needs and interests of disabled
people in Southern Africa.”
Two persons, one woman and one
man each with a disability were identified from all SAFOD member
countries. SAFOD stands for Southern Africa Federation of the Disabled.
SAFOD has member federations in 10 countries of Angola, Botswana,
Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia
and Zimbabwe.
In one of the reports to DfID,
the programme sponsors SAFOD writes that: “… in terms of research, it is
SAFOD’s experience that disabled people have invariably been the
subjects but not the owners of research processes and outputs.
Therefore, through the SRP it is anticipated that the exclusion of
disability will be tackled, not only in poverty research issues and
through the generation of new knowledge attained through research
activities, but also through an empowering process of taking the lead in
setting the research agenda and participation throughout the research
process.”
While the world observes the
International Day of Persons with Disabilities on December 3, this year
the, UN says many persons with disabilities continue to face barriers to
their participation in their communities and are often forced to live on
the margins of society.
“They often face stigma and
discrimination and are routinely denied basic rights such as food,
education, employment, access to health and reproductive health
services.”
Actually the theme this year is:
“Making the MDGs Inclusive: Empowerment of persons with disabilities
and their communities around the world”.
“The Day provides an opportunity
to mobilize action to achieve the goal of full and equal enjoyment of
human rights and participation in society by persons with disabilities,”
the UN says in part.
It also says it is essential to
ensure that persons with disabilities are integrated into all
development activities in order to achieve the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) because although many commitments have been made to include
disability and persons with disabilities in development, the gap between
policy and practice continues.
Globally, the UN says one in ten
people is a person living with disability and that persons with
disabilities constitute up to 20 per cent of the population living in
poverty in developing countries.
The data management training, a
process to impart research skills in Southern Africa’s 10 countries
marks a turning point in the lives of disabled persons. A turning point
because this data management training process kick-starts the unpacking
of the MDGs.
The UN says MDGs can only be
achieved if persons with disabilities and their family members are
included to ensure that they benefit from international development
initiatives.
As part of unpacking the MDGs,
already four trainees from the team of 20 are part of the research
groups that won tenders to carry-out research projects for SAFOD. At
the time of writing this story, three trainees were preparing to make
their ever first presentation at an international research conference,
the African Network for Evidence and Action in Disability (AFRINEAD) in
Cape Town, South Africa.
“Come 2011, we will be having a
core group of our own researchers that will be working at national
level, providing leadership in terms of emancipatory research,” says
Phiri.
The man who is taking these
disabled persons through the research process, Professor Leslie Swartz
states that there is enormous amount of resource among people with
disabilities. Leslie says because people with disabilities have been
excluded and because they know that this exclusion is injustice, they
have always questioned why the world treats them the way it does.
“These are people who have learnt
to ask questions about why the world treats them the way it does,”
Leslie says and adds that “the more these people are included, the more
everyone gains.”
Although these people have been
trained for a year, their training process is not conducted on full-time
basis. They have been exposed to training for almost four times in a
workshop format. There is an enormous amount of work ahead as the
training continues in 2010.
But as the challenge to learn
research skills remains true even to people without disabilities, this
team of people with disabilities are upbeat about what they have covered
so far. They are a determined lot and have shown that even through
difficult circumstances, it can still be done as Stuart Chauluka, one of
the participants from Malawi says:
“What I thought I know about
research, I realize now that I didn’t know. Had it been I was driving, I
could have said that I have been given a license to drive a car. It’s up
to me to drive and be a good driver; even teaching others how to drive,”
Chauluka who has partial sight disability states.
At the beginning of any programme,
different people hold different opinions and question about its success.
One of the trainees, the oldest in the team, Sibonisiwe Mazula concedes
to have held low opinions about the programme but her view has now
changed:
“My expectations of the programme
were very low, but after the training in Malawi, Mozambique, South
Africa and Zambia, I learnt that the more you communicate with other
people, the more you learn,” she says.
This sentiment is representative
of the 20 participants with various disabilities who now have the
opportunity to research on their own issues. They prove that disability
is better experienced than explained.
Ends.
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