This research investigates the systemic barriers disabled people face in the
structures of society and the gap between legal provisions and factual reality.
Disabled people are often marginalized and perceived as recipients of care
rather than participants in society. In this respect, it tries to investigate
how legal and social systems pervert discrimination through examples such as the
unequal treatment of Paralympians and Olympians in India.
The present study
borrows the concept of indirect discrimination as discussed in the case
Lt. Col. Nitisha v. Union of India 2021 (Nitisha v. Union of India, 2021) to argue that
although social structures may appear fair, they often fail to deliver justice
to persons with disabilities, making them marginalized. This article discusses
systemic exclusion in sports, education, and work life. It also recommends legal
and social solutions to the gap between abstract entitlements and real-life
inclusion.
Introduction
Disabled individuals frequently find themselves marginalized within societal
frameworks, receiving sympathy instead of authentic recognition or
participation. This phenomenon of exclusion affects various domains, including
education, employment, and public acknowledgment, particularly evident in the
realm of sports. For example, in India, Olympians are hailed with extensive
media coverage and financial incentives, while Paralympians frequently remain
overlooked, even though they accomplish equally impressive achievements
(Donnelly & Inglis, 2010). This inequality represents broader social patterns
that exclude individuals with disabilities and reflect them as inactive or
incapable of participating significantly (Shakespeare, 2006).
While there are laws like the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act (Rights of
Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016)[1] in place, many of these provisions prove
to be insufficient to make them wholly inclusive and people with disabilities
remain vulnerable to systemic discrimination. This article examines how social
structures maintain exclusion, and using a reference to Lt. Col. Nitisha v.
Union of India (Nitisha v. Union of India, 2021), it demonstrates indirect
discrimination. Policies may appear neutral, but their ineffectiveness in
providing accommodations heightens the sense of marginalization.
Research problem
The heart of the problem lies in the disagreement of having protective legal
provisions and the real exclusion of disabled people. Even after the RPWD Act,
2016 (Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016), has been implemented, the
theoretical gap from the practical scenario still exists. The article aims to
find the root cause of exclusion, identify how systemic discrimination seems to
manifest across sectors, and attempt to outline some possible reforms that can
be taken.
This study is focused particularly on addressing the Systemic
discrimination against persons with disabilities is evident, particularly at the
societal level has exclusionary and marginalizing tendencies. Legal instruments
like the RPWD Act (Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016) are
insufficient to prevent marginalization; there is a huge difference between
entitlements that would appear theoretically and implementation that happens in
practice. What is required, therefore, is to have tangible measures so that
disabled persons can have full exercise of their rights.
Literature Review
Disability studies throw light into the issues that bar disabled people's full
inclusion in society. According to Barnes and Mercer (Barnes & Mercer, 2010),
people in society often portray disabled people as helpless, hence putting them
on a pathway away from societal participation. For instance, the world of
sports, employment sectors, and education sectors are parts that usually
sideline disabled persons.
For example, disabled athletes gain less publicity or support in sports than
their normal-bodied counterparts get as mentioned in the Donnelly and Inglis
article (Donnelly & Inglis, 2010). In the employment market, according to
Goodley (Goodley, 2014), the organization policies usually exclude the specific
requirements of disabled people, therefore they are excluded from fair
participation. Similarly, Shakespeare appeals to how most schools lack the
necessary resources like sign language interpreters and accessible materials for
learning to support disabled students, thus resulting in poor academic
performance and limited prospects (Shakespeare, 2006).
These are then compounded by social views of disabled people as a burden rather
than full participants in public life (Schweik, 2009). The study by Meyer and
Jankowski in 2019 (Meyer & Jankowski, 2019) has revealed the fact that the media
represents the disabled, which leads to stereotyping and exclusion of disabled
people within society. In place of this, they offered that systemic
discrimination occurs when media fails to present disabled individuals as active
participants, and unless this situation changes, disability narratives will lead
to future exclusion.
The Lt. Col. Nitisha judgment of 2021[2] makes it clear
that the system, despite provisions of equality under the law, still has
discrimination against disabled individuals and requires adjusted accommodation
so that equality could be ensured as a neutral policy might seem to be but be
disastrous for the disabled without proper accommodation (Nitisha v. Union of
India, 2021).
Through a synthesis of these sources, the literature reveals how systemic
discrimination interacts across sectors and visibly marks the exclusion of
disabled people from public life in education, employment, sports, and media. As
the issue will also show, both older, foundational studies and more recent
research describe systemic discrimination even now, despite advances in legal
rights.
Formulation and Argumentation
The primary argument of this article is that there is indirect discrimination
perpetuating the exclusion of disabled people through systems put in place in
society. The Lt. Col. Nitisha's judgment is particularly instructive on the way
seemingly neutral-sounding policies can indeed end up marginalizing people when
they do not take into account the specific needs of disabled people (Nitisha v.
Union of India, 2021).
Although the RPWD Act 2016 (Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016) is
progressive on paper, it does not measure up quite well in practice by denying
disabled people a robust support system for participation in society. This
article looks at systemic discrimination in sports, employment, and education
while offering a framework of legal and social transformation based on case law
and other legal documents as well as literature in this area of study to work
towards a full development of the challenges that disabled people face.
Systemic Discrimination in the Arena of Sports
Systemic discrimination against the disabled is one of its most evident
manifestations in the sporting arena. Within India, Paralympians are
consistently overshadowed by their able-bodied counterpart, while Olympians are
celebrated as national heroes. Even as Olympians are celebrating in the glory,
the exploits of Paralympians are unknown to many (Donnelly & Inglis, 2010).
This is more than just a matter of acknowledgment; the visions above display a
hegemonic social policy of devaluing the work of disabled people and their
overall value in getting the limelight and accolades in public service (Barnes &
Mercer, 2010). Non-coverage for Paralympians by media, presumably, can highlight
the negative imaginations of potential individuals from persons with
disabilities and perpetuate the rest of their oppression as public persons.
(Shakespeare, 2006).
Systemic Inequality in Employment and Education
The exclusion of people with disabilities is not only in sports but continues in
employment and education sites. In the employment setting, studies have shown
that there is exclusion of individuals with disability due to failure to
implement conducive policies to accommodate them, despite legal protection (Goodley,
2014). While promising to protect the rights of people with disabilities, the
RPWD Act (Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016) has been implemented
inconsistently, making it difficult for the victims of the exclusion.
Similarly, in education, students with disabilities have been segregated in
education due to a lack of substantive accommodations (Shakespeare, 2006).
Schools do not often make educationally necessary aids, such as Braille books or
sign language interpreters, thereby limiting disabled students' participation in
academe. Hence, it leads to bad academic performance and further life
opportunities are limited (Schweik, 2009).
Indirect Discrimination and the Lt. Col. Nitisha Judgment
The judgment of Lt. Col. Nitisha, as pronounced in 2021 gives an important legal
framework for understanding how systemic discrimination functions in the
societal setup. The judgment shows that even policies that may seem very neutral
can result in discrimination if the accommodation of their particular needs by
disabled individuals fails (Nitisha v. Union of India, 2021).
The essence of such indirect discrimination often manifests in ways that seem
unintentional but are profoundly harmful to the lives of disabled persons
because they disallow them from opportunities in education, employment, and
public life. In this judgment, the existing legal frameworks and policies should
transform from mere formal equality to the specific needs of disabled persons if
they are to be fully included in the public sphere.
Solutions Presented
Addressing systemic discrimination against the disabled requires multiple
strands. For instance, one of them could be an amendment in the legal provisions
to ensure the better implementation of the RPWD Act (Rights of Persons with
Disabilities Act, 2016). In this sense, public institutions and, more generally,
schools, universities, and places of work will have to be made accountable for
not implementing the existing provisions regarding accommodation. Monitoring
bodies can ensure proper implementation, bring them on par, and raise standards.
Secondly, Social attitudes must shift toward disabled people: that is, society
should recognize that disabled people are equal contributors who could possess
the possibility of agency and meaningful contribution, instead of recipients of
care. Public awareness campaigns and educational programs can be important sites
for that shift in attitudes (Barnes & Mercer, 2010).
Finally, representation of disabled people through the media has to be improved.
The media itself has immense power to influence the perception of the public,
and by socializing them towards the more frequent occurrence of disabled sports
people and professionals, this can be used to decrease myths and socialize
society to alter their conduct to become more respectable (Donnelly & Inglis,
2010).
Conclusion
In summary, despite such progressive legislation, including the RPWD Act (Rights
of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016), systemic disadvantage against disabled
people remains deeply ingrained within social structures. By strengthening legal
structures, changing attitudes in society, and improving media representation,
society can meaningfully take steps toward achieving full inclusion for people
who are disabled.
Facilitating such changes in society would begin with legal reforms, create new
ideas through public awareness campaigns, and move on to better media
representation. Ensuring that laws, like the RPWD Act (Rights of Persons with
Disabilities Act, 2016), are implemented and shifted in terms of public
attitudes about equal contributors by disabled individuals will be a great
stride toward achieving full societal inclusion. The solutions mentioned
represent a framework of action that strives to address the roots of exclusion.
From there, this will ensure that individuals with disabilities are enabled to
exercise all their rights and live in public life minus the experience of such
systemic barriers.
References:
Articles
- Barnes, C., & Mercer, G. (Eds.). (2010). Exploring disability: A sociological introduction. Polity Press.
- Donnelly, P., & Inglis, D. (2010). Sport and the marginalization of disabled athletes: A case of unequal coverage.
Sport in Society, 13(4), 616-628.
- Goodley, D. (2014). Dis/ability studies: Theorising disablism and ableism. Routledge.
- Schweik, S. (2009). The ugly laws: Disability in public. NYU Press.
- Shakespeare, T. (2006). Disability rights and wrongs. Routledge.
- Meyer, A., & Jankowski, N. (2019). Disability and societal change: A comprehensive overview. Routledge.
Case Laws
- Nitisha v. Union of India W.P. (Civil) No. 1014/2017 SC 2021.
Legislation
- Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016.
End Notes:
- The Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 is a crucial law of India that seeks to ensure and promote the rights of persons with disabilities. It categorizes 21 disability categories, mandates accessibility in public spaces, transport, and educational institutions, and provides job reservation for disabled persons. Despite its importance, the implementation encounters various issues and negative attitude of society.
- Lt. Col. Nitisha v. Union of India, 2021 case was intended to challenge indirect discrimination against persons with disabilities within the Indian Armed Forces. The case involved a serving officer who challenged the discriminatory policies that failed to take account of her disability and asserted that such policies manifested acts of systemic exclusion. The court ruled that even seemingly neutral policies could have negative effects on discrimination, as long as the formulation of policies did not draw on particular needs of individuals with disabilities. In this ruling, the court emphasized something more than effective accommodations and a movement from formal to substantive equality.
Please Drop Your Comments