Bulletin Updates August 16th 2010
Tue, Aug 31, 2010
ADDC BULLETIN: August 16th 2010
Welcome to the ADDC Bulletin Update. Generic disability and domestic information will be included in our Bulletins when possible as part of our commitment to disability advocacy and strengthening partnerships: however our focus remains on disability & development issues.
ADDC does not necessarily endorse all opinions that are within the contents of our information and we make every attempt to validate information prior to distribution. If you notice any anomalies or have information on updated versions of our information, please forward to ADDC Secretariat.
This bulletin provides updates on the following:
• ADDC Congratulates Uncle Lester NAIDOC Elder of the Year 2010
• BPKS training on UNCRPD
• Disability Rights International Unveils New Name and Website
• Conferences and Events
• Employment & Funding Opportunities
• Resources
Updates
ADDC Congratulates Uncle Lester NAIDOC Elder of the Year 2010
Uncle Lester Bostock won the elder of the year award at this year’s NAIDOC Awards, held at the Melbourne Convention Centre on July 9th, 2010.
Uncle Lester is a Life Member and previous Board Member of PWD, a founding member of the Aboriginal Disability Network, and the current Chair of First Peoples Disability Network Australia.
A Bundjalung man from Box River Reserve in New South Wales, Uncle Lester was unable to read or write when he left school at just 13. Undeterred, he returned to education as an adult and became a teacher. Uncle Lester is regarded as a pioneer of Indigenous media in Australia. He helped to set up Radio Redfern, was involved in creating the first Indigenous theatre group, and was the first Aboriginal presenter on SBS Radio.
Experiencing an accident in the 1950s that led to his leg being amputated, Uncle Lester has worked to raise awareness of the unmet needs of Aboriginal people with disability. He has played important roles in many Indigenous disability and community organisations and was part of the 1967 referendum campaign and the Aboriginal Tent Embassy.
The NAIDOC Award is recognition of a lifetime of achievement and is a credit to him and the extraordinary contribution he has made to Aboriginal services in Australia.
Source: PWD Australia
BPKS training on UNCRPD
BPKS organized a three day long training programme on Understanding UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities on 6 to 8 August, 2010.
The Training was participated by 50 national level leaders with disabilities who are the Executive Director or President of District level Disable Peoples Organization.
Mr. Ishaque Mia facilitate the training for the all three days and explained all the process, actions which are declared and the Optional protocol to implement the Un Convention.
Source: Ishaque Mia-BPKS
Disability Rights International Unveils New Name and Website
Email information from Laurie Ahern, President- Disability Rights International
Dear Supporter,
We are proud to announce our organization’s new name, Disability Rights International. Our mission has not changed. Formerly Mental Disability Rights International, we remain committed to protecting the human rights and promoting the integration into society of people with disabilities. Our new name reflects the reality that people with any kind of disability-whether mental or physical-are often shut away from society, locked in institutions, and denied basic human dignity and rights.
Over the past 16 years, Disability Rights International has protected the rights of the world’s most vulnerable population. We have pressured governments into protecting human rights, freed children from cages, and we have closed abusive psychiatric hospitals. In their place, we have helped create community alternatives and self-advocacy movements so that people can regain control of their lives and live with dignity. We are proud to say that we have reunited institutionalized children with their loving families-and we have fostered communities where it is no longer necessary for a family to place a child in an institution in the first place.
For every child we have saved, unfortunately, there are hundreds that we haven’t reached in time. In recognition of the worldwide need of disability advocacy for children, Disability Rights International is launching the Worldwide Campaign to End the Institutionalization of Children. It is our goal to ensure that the next generation of children are never locked behind the doors of an institution they will likely never leave, and to sustain the advocacy to get the children who are already in abusive institutions, out.
We would like to invite you to visit our new website at www.disabilityrightsintl.org to learn more about the campaign. This work is possible because of you- and your support remains crucial. Please consider making a contribution to help support the Worldwide Campaign to End the Institutionalization of Children.
Conferences & Events
• Refer to ADDC calendar of events on ADDC website for further events.
ADDC Conference
Implementing disability-inclusive development in the Pacific and Asia:
Reviewing progress, planning the future
An international conference and action planning roundtable
15-17 September 2010
Darwin Convention Centre, Australia
CONFERENCE REGISTRATION DATE EXTENDED TO
AUGUST 25TH
ADDC have been informed that some potential conference delegates have experienced some difficulties in getting their registration in on time. We are able to extend registration deadline to AUGUST 25th. There will be no further extensions, so please register your attendance now.
6th Annual Nossal Institute for Global Health Forum 2010
The Millennium Development Goals 2000 – 2015 — Can NGOs and academia help get us there?
Thursday 2nd September 2010 in Melbourne
Many approaches and programs are working and contributing to progress towards the Millennium Development Goals, but overall we are falling short of achieving them by 2015. This forum examines some of the biggest gaps in global health’s fundamental structure and function and suggests ways that they could be filled–helping to get closer to the MDGs as well as contributing to other pressing global health issues.
This one day forum immediately follows the 63rd United Nations Annual Department of Public Information (DPI) / Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) Conference being held at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre entitled “Advance Global Health: Achieve the MDGs”. The Forum also comes just three weeks before the UN General Assembly Summit on the Millennium Development Goals.
When: Thursday 2nd September 2010
Time: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Where: Bio 21 Institute, 30 Flemington Road, Parkville
Registration is free but you must register your interest to attend with Heather Saunders (hsaun@unimelb.edu.au) before 27 August
Topics:
• The Future for Global Health
• ‘International development organisations and academia working together for the MDGs’.
• Evidence in action…. or Evidence inaction: Creative partnerships between academia and community health NGOs.
• The Next Generation: Putting the D back into the MDGs
• The next set of Millennium Development Goals
Speakers will include:
Thelma Narayan, Peoples Health Movement,Bangalore, India; Benedict David, AusAID; Ruth Bamela Engo-Tjega, Founder and President of African Action on AIDS; Kirsty Thompson, CBM Australia;
Jane Chege, World Vision International; Marc Purcell, Australian Council for International Development; Shobha Arole, Comprehensive Primary Health Care Project, Jamhked, India; Aleida Guevara, William Soler Children’s Hospital Havana, Cuba; Sally Baker, CBM-Nossal Institute Partnership for Disability Inclusive Development; Robert Kumar, The Uttarakhand Cluster, India.
For a full Forum Program, please go to website: http://www.ni.unimelb.edu.au/about_us/news_and_events/events
Source: Nossal Institute for Global Health
3rd HIV and AIDS in the Workplace Research Conference
The 3rd HIV and AIDS in the Workplace Research Conference, taking place in Johannesburg from 9-11 November, is set to be a hallmark event. The Conference will reflect on the intersection of workplace HIV responses, academic research and surveillance, with a particular focus on strengthening prevention interventions in the fight against HIV and AIDS in Africaand linking prevention research to workplace practice.
With prevention being a key priority focus area of the NSP, success in preventing new infections is widely accepted as the key to ultimately curbing the impact of HIV and AIDS on South Africa and its people.
This private sector conference offers an opportunity for business to step back and reflect on HIV/AIDS programmes, using the lens of research and practice to consider what has worked and what lessons can be extracted. Importantly, this is also a platform to translate research into meaningful and sustainable responses that can be applied in the workplace going forward.
We look forward to an innovative and engaging conference and encourage you to register as soon as possible on the conference website (www.sabcoha.org/conference) or contact the conference secretariat on: Tel: +27 12 816 9074 Fax: +27 12 807 7191 / 7153
E-mail: TshepoG@foundation.co.za
Source: GPDD
2010 Global Domestic Violence Conference
The Global Domestic Violence Conference 2010 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia is scheduled on November 1-3, 2010. This conference is set to be the largest gathering of community groups, government and non-government agencies(NGO’s) all devoted to highlighting and showcasing successful programs with the aim of empowering people and workers in the field of domestic violence.
For further information: http://domesticviolenceconference.net/
UN Women Website
In an historic move, the United Nations General Assembly voted unanimously on 2 July 2010 to create a new entity to accelerate progress in meeting the needs of women and girls worldwide.
The establishment of the UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women — to be known as UN Women — is a result of years of negotiations between UN Member States and advocacy by the global women’s movement. It is part of the UN reform agenda, bringing together resources and mandates for greater impact.
“I am grateful to Member States for having taken this major step forward for the world’s women and girls,” said Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in a statement welcoming the decision. “UN Women will significantly boost UN efforts to promote gender equality, expand opportunity, and tackle discrimination around the globe.” – Click here to read Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s full statement
Click here to learn more about the UN Women Website www.unwomen.org
Source: PWD Australia
Employment & Funding Opportunities
ASIA-PACIFIC REGIONAL OFFICER
Full-Time Position
International Human Rights/Disability Project
There is an immediate opening for a full-time position of Asia-Pacific Regional Officer for the Disability Rights Promotion International (D.R.P.I.) project.
D.R.P.I. is a collaborative project working to establish a holistic and sustainable global system to monitor the human rights of people with disabilities. D.R.P.I.’s International Coordination Centre is based at York University in Toronto, Canada. With the support of Disabled Peoples International – Asia-Pacific Region (D.P.I.A.P.), D.R.P.I. is establishing a Regional Centre for Asia-Pacific in Bangkok, Thailand. The Asia-Pacific Regional Officer will work from the Bangkok office.
Source: Henning Holz-DPI-AP Information Support
Resources
FASID, The Foundation for Advanced Studies on International Development in Japan, recently published its report of the project ‘Capacity Development in Disability and Development for CLMV Government Officers ’The project started from July 2007 to June 2010 with the objective of enhancing the capacities of government officers engaged in disability issues to analyze, formulate and implement policies and programs in Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Vietnam (CLMV countries).
The report is written in English and the four country languages and a good resources for Disability and Development. I also contributed to the report.
You can find the report with the following URL.
http://www.fasid.or.jp/english/about/index.html
Source: GPDD
ADDC is an Australian based, international network focusing attention, expertise and action on disability issues in developing countries; building on a human rights platform for disability advocacy.
To join ADDC, submit information or to find out more, contact:
ADDC Executive Officer
Christine Walton
T 1800 678 069
cwalton@cbm.org.au
www.addc.org.au

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