Conference on the Future Role of the European Union Structural funds to Advance Community Living for Older People and People with Disabilities

The Centre for Disability Law and Policy at National University of Ireland, Galway will run a conference on the 3rd of May 2013.   The title of the conference will be ‘Community Living for all’ – A Conference on the Future Role of the European Union Structural funds to Advance Community Living for Older People and People with Disabilities’. It will be ‘an event in association with the Irish Presidency of the Council of the EU’ which is appropriate given that a stated priority of Ireland’s EU Presidency will be to finalise agreement on the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) that will determine the EU budget from 2014-2020 and therefore cohesion funding.  The event is jointly directed by Senator Katherine Zappone, member of the Senate of Ireland and the Centre for Disability Law & Policy directed by Professor Gerard Quinn. 
The conference is open to all interested in the development of positive EU social policy in the fields of ageing and disability. 

The speakers are drawn from a variety of EU-level institutions and others including the European Commission, the EU Fundamental Rights Agency, the European Group of National Human Rights Institutions, the United States Federal Administration for Community Living.  European level civil society groups will be represented by the European Disability Forum and Age Platform Europe.  The United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (European Region) will also be represented.  The growing role of European philanthropy in achieving community living will be represented by the European Foundation Centre. 

The conference will be opened by the Irish Minister for Older People, People with Disabilities, Mental Health and Equality – Kathleen Lynch, T.D.  More details on the conference and registration is available here.


Conference on the Future Role of the European Union Structural funds to Advance Community Living for Older People and People with Disabilities

Dealings by Irish companies in repressive countries raise concerns about business and human rights

We are delighted to welcome this Guest post from Dr Shane Darcy.  Dr Darcy is a lecturer at the Irish Centre for Human Rights, National University of Ireland Galway. A previous version of this article appeared in the Sunday Business Post on 11 March 2012.

The news that products provided by Irish companies are being implicated in repression and human right abuses overseas should not come as a surprise, given the lack of adequate regulation here. Software sold in Syria by Dublin-based Cellusys and AdaptiveMobile has been reported as being used by the Syrian government to censor text messages by protestors challenging President Assad’s rule. This is a government which the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, has accused of “gross, widespread and systematic human rights violations”, amounting perhaps to crimes against humanity. As Ireland increasingly positions itself as an export orientated economy, its commitment to human rights requires that it ensure that companies operating here are human rights compliant.

This is not the first instance of involvement by Irish companies in the suppression of human rights outside of Ireland. Bloomberg reported in October 2011 that a system sold by AdaptiveMobile may have been used by Iran’s law enforcement and security agencies in their repression of political activists. Cement Roadstone Holdings has been criticised for its 25% shareholding of Israeli company Mashav, which controls Nesher Cement, supplier of concrete for the construction of settlements and the ‘separation wall’, declared to be unlawful by the International Court of Justice. Human rights is not just a matter for Continue reading “Dealings by Irish companies in repressive countries raise concerns about business and human rights”

Dealings by Irish companies in repressive countries raise concerns about business and human rights

Thoughts on a New Ireland: Changing the anti-racist politics of the Intercultural Education Strategy

HRinI is very pleased to publish this post by Dr. Karl Kitching, lecturer in education in the School of Education, University College Cork, as the last in today’s series.

The Department of Education and Skills is not responsible for the direct provision policies that have harshly circumscribed the lives of asylum-seeker children in Ireland. Nor is it responsible for the ongoing police profiling of particular migrants. It did not help introduce laws which criminalise nomadism always and everywhere as trespass. It did not sanction the loss of a Minister of State responsible for integration (itself a contestable idea) after the 2011 election. It has not initially contributed to ESRI findings pre-recession that new migrant students are overrepresented in disadvantaged schools (a finding that has been politically inverted to assume they should ‘raise expectations’ for Irish working class students) and that black migrants are nine times more likely to be unemployed than Irish nationals.

Continue reading “Thoughts on a New Ireland: Changing the anti-racist politics of the Intercultural Education Strategy”

Thoughts on a New Ireland: Changing the anti-racist politics of the Intercultural Education Strategy

Human Rights and Irish (Political) Cultural Change

At last weeks first birthday workshop on human rights in Ireland, Fergus Ryan from DIT, suggested that the crucial problem for human rights activists in Ireland was that decisions at the ECHR or Supreme Court were seen as the end of the story, ignoring what he called the ‘cultural change’ necessary for successful human rights action. He argued that you cannot adduce this or that ECHR decision in a political argument and expect that to be the end of the matter. Rather, it is necessary for people to culturally buy-in to human rights. To this point, Mark Kelly of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties asked; how long do we have to wait for cultural change. I want to suggest that Continue reading “Human Rights and Irish (Political) Cultural Change”

Human Rights and Irish (Political) Cultural Change