Insa Klasing

This book sheds new light on the marginalisation of disabled people in rural India. It exposes the barriers that exclude disabled people from participation in education, livelihoods, social life and medical care. Comprehensive chapters describe each aspect of exclusion in turn, explaining the barriers to participation and evaluating the government’s policy and programmatic response. Each chapter ends with recommendations for government policy and an agenda for NGO intervention.
This study finds that social exclusion defines the experience of being disabled in rural India at least as much as disability itself. It demonstrates how the direct impact of disability in one area, for example education, exacerbates barriers to participation in other areas, including work and social life. This underlines the importance of access to timely and adequate healthcare as a means of preventing many disabilities in the first place, and breaking the vicious cycle of social consequences before it starts.
Insa Klasing is a development economist. Educated at the University of Oxford, she pursued postgraduate studies in Indian development at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London. She completed assignments at the World Bank and the U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America, and a twelve month research fellowship with ActionAid in New Delhi. She is founding director of Zindagi-India, an NGO funding basic education projects in disadvantaged areas of India.
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