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Proclaimed by General Assembly resolution
3447 (XXX) of 9 December 1975
The General Assembly,
Mindful of the pledge made by Member States, under the Charter
of the United Nations to take joint and separate action
in co-operation with the Organization to promote higher
standards of living, full employment and conditions of economic
and social progress and development,
Reaffirming its faith in human rights and fundamental freedoms
and in the principles of peace, of the dignity and worth
of the human person and of social justice proclaimed in
the Charter,
Recalling the principles of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, the International Covenants on Human Rights,
the Declaration of the Rights of the Child and the Declaration
on the Rights of Mentally Retarded Persons, as well as the
standards already set for social progress in the constitutions,
conventions, recommendations and resolutions of the International
Labor Organization, the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization, the World Health Organization,
the United Nations Children's Fund and other organizations
concerned,
Recalling also Economic and Social Council resolution 1921
(LVIII) of 6 May 1975 on the prevention of disability and
the rehabilitation of disabled persons,
Emphasizing that the Declaration on Social Progress and
Development has proclaimed the necessity of protecting the
rights and assuring the welfare and rehabilitation of the
physically and mentally disadvantaged,
Bearing in mind the necessity of preventing physical and
mental disabilities and of assisting disabled persons to
develop their abilities in the most varied fields of activities
and of promoting their integration as far as possible in
normal life,
Aware that certain countries, at their present stage of
development, can devote only limited efforts to this end,
Proclaims this Declaration on the Rights of Disabled Persons
and calls for national and international action to ensure
that it will be used as a common basis and frame of reference
for the protection of these rights:
- The term "disabled person" means any person
unable to ensure by himself or herself, wholly or partly,
the necessities of a normal individual and/or social life,
as a result of deficiency, either congenital or not, in
his or her physical or mental capabilities.
- Disabled persons shall enjoy all the rights set forth
in this Declaration. These rights shall be granted to
all disabled persons without any exception whatsoever
and without distinction or discrimination on the basis
of race, color, sex, language, religion, political or
other opinions, national or social origin, state of wealth,
birth or any other situation applying either to the disabled
person himself or herself or to his or her family.
- Disabled persons have the inherent right to respect
for their human dignity. Disabled persons, whatever the
origin, nature and seriousness of their handicaps and
disabilities, have the same fundamental rights as their
fellow-citizens of the same age, which implies first and
foremost the right to enjoy a decent life, as normal and
full as possible.
- Disabled persons have the same civil and political rights
as other human beings; paragraph 7 of the Declaration
on the Rights of Mentally Retarded Persons applies to
any possible limitation or suppression of those rights
for mentally disabled persons.
Disabled persons are entitled to the measures designed to
enable them to become as self-reliant as possible.
- Disabled persons have the right to medical, psychological
and functional treatment, including prosthetic and orthetic
appliances, to medical and social rehabilitation, education,
vocational training and rehabilitation, aid, counseling,
placement services and other services which will enable
them to develop their capabilities and skills to the maximum
and will hasten the processes of their social integration
or reintegration.
- Disabled persons have the right to economic and social
security and to a decent level of living. They have the
right, according to their capabilities, to secure and
retain employment or to engage in a useful, productive
and remunerative occupation and to join trade unions.
- Disabled persons are entitled to have their special
needs taken into consideration at all stages of economic
and social planning.
- Disabled persons have the right to live with their families
or with foster parents and to participate in all social,
creative or recreational activities. No disabled person
shall be subjected, as far as his or her residence is
concerned, to differential treatment other than that required
by his or her condition or by the improvement which he
or she may derive therefrom. If the stay of a disabled
person in a specialized establishment is indispensable,
the environment and living conditions therein shall be
as close as possible to those of the normal life of a
person of his or her age.
- Disabled persons shall be protected against all exploitation,
all regulations and all treatment of a discriminatory,
abusive or degrading nature.
- Disabled persons shall be able to avail themselves of
qualified legal aid when such aid proves indispensable
for the protection of their persons and property. If judicial
proceedings are instituted against them, the legal procedure
applied shall take their physical and mental condition
fully into account.
- Organizations of disabled persons may be usefully consulted
in all matters regarding the rights of disabled persons.
- Disabled persons, their families and communities shall
be fully informed, by all appropriate means, of the rights
contained in this Declaration.
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