Showing posts with label Supriya Akerkar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supriya Akerkar. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 October 2019

Work in Progress: Age and disability in humanitarian response

Supriya Akerkar introduces the latest in our Work in Progress seminar series: Tackling Persistent exclusions of older people and people with disabilities in humanitarian responses: Challenges and Way Forward
The sustainable development goals promise to leave no one behind and call for social inclusion of the excluded or groups marginalised in the development processes and all its SDG goals. Pursuance of these goals in inclusive ways would require various institutions to have the capacities to deliver this agenda. This research is a contribution towards this global ambition and reflects on the evidence from the Age and Disability Capacity Programme (ADCAP) to deliver it, particularly in relation to two social groups – older people and people with disabilities in the context of humanitarian responses and humanitarian organisations.
In this relation, it asks two questions: How and why does persistent exclusion of older people and people with disabilities take place in humanitarian responses? How can humanitarian organisations be capacitated to enable inclusion of older people and people with disabilities in their work?

The research identifies the dominant approach of humanitarian organisations which work with ‘special needs’ or ‘checklist’ approach to older people and people with disabilities as one of the main barriers to inclusion. Integrating concepts from critical disability and ageism studies, and the empirical evidence from the ADCAP initiative, the research develops a transdisciplinary framework for ‘critical capacity building’ of the humanitarian organisations to enable inclusion. Conceived as a ‘social-political discursive’ (SPD) framework for critical capacity building, it calls for facilitating structural changes within humanitarian organisations through focused and sustained SPD engagements over a period of time. The research shows that facilitation of such a critical capacity building approach is more demanding and requires more efforts than organising technical trainings, the conventional approach to capacity building in humanitarian organisations. 
The seminar is from 16.30 to 18.00 on Thursday, 31 October in JHB307.