Abstract

ABSTRACTPeople with intellectual disability and complex support needs challenge human rights in the current disability policy and practice framework in Australia. With the implementation of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) in Australia, it is pivotal to understand how human rights can offer a framework for understanding these challenges. There are complex issues and challenges in operationalising support for the human rights of people with intellectual disability. Their experience is characterised by overlapping and compounding forms of discrimination, abuse and vulnerability in their social and systemic interactions. This article uses qualitative content analysis to describe and articulate disadvantages and challenges of this group, and maps this onto the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and current policies and practices in Australia. The article concludes that utilising human rights instruments helps to recognise the multiple disadvantages faced by people with intellectual disability and complex support needs and focus on the specific areas that need to be addressed in policy and practice.

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