Implementing International Disability Law in the European Union - Quirico, Ottavio; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Implementing International Disability Law in the European Union

A Substantive and Procedural Appraisal
 
Edition number: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

This book investigates the implementation of disability rights and duties in the European Union, aiming to understand its functioning and explore ways forward through a critical analysis of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) within the context of international regulation.

Long description:

This book investigates the implementation of disability rights and duties in the European Union, aiming to understand its functioning and explore ways forward through a critical analysis of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) within the context of international regulation. Along the lines of the integration of fundamental rights within the common market, the EU has indeed progressively adopted meaningful regulation to advance disability rights, which are now essentially shaped by the CRPD. The research considers the interaction between law and policy at the international, EU and Member States? level, focusing on three essential elements, including the sources of disability law, institutional mechanisms and substantive regulation. Grounded in the distinction between primary rules on law-making and secondary norms on enforcement, the analysis unfolds against the background of the ?twin? transitions on sustainability and digitalisation and encompasses the Council of Europe system, particularly in the light of the foreseeable accession of the EU to the European Convention on Human Rights. Arguably, following the progressive development it has facilitated in other regulatory areas, the Court of Justice of the European Union can provide a decisive contribution to advancing inclusiveness for people with disabilities in the Union.


The book is a useful resource for practitioners, policymakers, academics, students, researchers and anyone interested in EU and international disability law and politics.

Table of Contents:

List of abbreviations ix


Introduction: EU multi-layered disability regulation 1


1 The trajectory of disability rights: history and sources of EU disability law 5


1.1 A concise history 5


1.2 The EU and the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) 11


1.2.1 The (tripartite) structure of the CRPD 11


1.2.2 The EU and the CRPD as a mixed agreement 12


1.2.2.1 Substance: a matter of competence 12


1.2.2.2 Procedure: between national institutions and the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CtRPD) 14


1.2.3 Allowing individual petitions under the Optional Protocol to the CRPD 16


1.2.4 The CRPD between EU law and the law of the Member States 17


1.3 Expanding the frame: the EU and (soft and hard) international obligations outside the CRPD 21


1.4 Disability in the legal sources of the EU jurisdiction 23


1.4.1 Disability in the sources of EU law and the centrality of the Charter of Fundamental Rights 23


1.4.2 Disability in the sources of EU Member States? law and the key role of action plans 27


1.5 Disability in the Council of Europe sources between the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and the European Social Charter 29


1.6 Prospective accession of the EU to the ECHR and sources of disability law 31


1.7 From fragmentation to harmonisation? The concept of ?disability? and the scope of application of disability rules 32


2 Articulating the institutional framework between the EU and Member States 34


2.1 Outlining the EU institutional framework for the CRPD 34


2.1.1 Decision-making (primary rules) 38


2.1.1.1 The European Commission as the core legislative mechanism to implement disability policies (CRPD article 33(1)) 38


2.1.1.2 Parliamentary impulsion 41


2.1.1.3 The polyhedric action of the Council of the EU 43


2.1.2 Rights enforcement (secondary norms) 45


2.1.2.1 The composite EU framework to promote, protect and monitor the implementation of the CRPD (article 33(2)) 45


2.1.2.2 The CJEU, dualism and disability rights under the CRPD 47


2.2 Mapping national institutions under CRPD article 33 50


2.2.1 National frameworks to implement, promote, protect and monitor the CRPD: variable geometry 50


2.2.1.1 Implementing the social disability paradigm in Denmark 50


2.2.1.2 The plurality of CRPD mechanisms in France 54


2.2.1.3 Germany and the implementation of the CRPD in federal States 57


2.2.1.4 Applying the CRPD in Italy as a region-based system 61


2.2.1.5 Comprehensively implementing the CRPD in Latvia 64


2.2.1.6 Romania and disability rights balancing 66


2.2.1.7 Financing deinstitutionalisation in Slovakia 68


2.2.1.8 Ad hoc mechanisms to implement the CRPD in Spain 70


2.3 Nothing about Us without Us: effective participation through representative organisations? 73


2.4 Institutional competence for external action on disability: formal and informal channels 76


2.5 The Council of Europe system, disability and the accession of the EU to the ECHR 78


2.5.1 Mainstreaming disability rights through decision-making 78


2.5.2 Rights enforcement 79


2.5.2.1 The progressive disability policy of the European Committee on Social Rights 79


2.5.2.2 Lights and shadows in the disability jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights 81


2.6 Perspectives disclosed by the accession of the EU to the ECHR: progressing disability rights in the light of institutional attrition? 87


3 Improving inclusiveness through substantive regulation 90


3.1 Key directions: ?twin? transitions and the 2030 EU Disability Strategy 90


3.1.1 Substance: promoting accessibility internally and externally 91


3.1.2 Implementation: respecting, protecting and fulfilling disability rights 95


3.2 Including people with disabilities in the common market and policy 97


3.2.1 Fostering participation 97


3.2.1.1 Participation and accessibility 97


3.2.1.2 Harmonising accessibility 101


3.2.2 Improving independent living 104


3.2.2.1 Deinstitutionalising EU Member States 104


3.2.2.2 Channelling funding into community-based services 110


3.2.3 Achieving equal access through education 112


3.2.3.1 The struggle for inclusiveness 112


3.2.3.2 Improving inclusiveness 117


3.2.4 Employment as a pathway to inclusion 120


3.2.4.1 The request for an accessible labour market 120


3.2.4.2 Comprehensively reforming employment as the centre of gravity for inclusion 125


3.3 A disability-inclusive sustainable economy: the European Green Deal and disability 128


3.4 Disability-oriented external action 131


3.5 Parallel disability rights developments in light of the accession of the EU to the ECHR? 133


Conclusion: Harmonising the layers 138


Documents 140


Cases 156


Bibliography 160


Index 169