Abstract

This essay critically analyzes the legal interpretation of the Supreme Court of the United States of what constitutes a “free and appropriate public education” for children with disabilities. Through the lens of a case study of an American child with communication disabilities, the essay examines why US law should instead be informed by a social model of disability embraced by the Convention of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). Related, the essay argues that American courts’ current interpretation of whether a student with disabilities has received an “appropriate education” relies too heavily on a medical model of disability, which requires a child first to demonstrate sufficient competence to merit related supports. Were the Supreme Court to adopt instead a social model of disability, however, it might advise public schools to presume the competence of students with disabilities. One implication of this essay is that even within the relatively robust legal framework for disability rights that presently exists in the US, judicial interpretation and enforcement of the law is too-often guided by judges’ able-ist assumptions. For CRPD States Parties, the implication of this argument is that members of the judiciary should be trained not only in existing legal standards, but also in disability history and theory that can guide the interpretation of the legal standards.

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