Marcia H. Rioux is a Distinguished Research Professor in the School of Health Policy and Management at York University and Principal Investigator and Co-Director of Disability Rights Promotion International. Paula C. Pinto is an Assistant Professor at the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Lisbon, where she also coordinates the Observatory on Disability and Human Rights. Gillian Parekh is a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto.
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* Acknowledgements* Introduction: A North-South Dialogue on Participatory Monitoring, Marcia H. Rioux* Background: Monitoring-A Key Element in Realizing Human Rights for All, Bengt Lindqvist* Section 1: Models Of Monitoring: International Perspectives* Chapter 1: Concurrent Multinational Monitoring of Disability Rights in the European Union: Potential, Principle, and Pragmatism, Anna Lawson and Mark Priestley* Chapter 2: The Preparation of a Parallel Report on the CRPD: The Philippine Experience, Lauro L. Purcil, Jr.* Chapter 3: Reflections on the First Working Period of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2009-2012), Maria Soledad Cisternas Reyes* Chapter 4: Monitoring Gender Equality and Violence in Conditions of Structural Inequality and Violence, Annie Bunting* Section 2: New Frontiers On Monitoring* Chapter 5: Bringing Pieces Together: A Way of Integrating Disability Rights Monitoring Data: Case Studies from Two Canadian Provinces, Ontario and Quebec, Mihaela Dinca-Panaitescu* Chapter 6: Human Rights Legal Clinics in Latin America: Tackling the Implementation of Disability Rights, Natalia Angel-Cabo* Chapter 7: Media Monitoring from a Disability Rights Perspective: A Critical Piece in the Rights Monitoring Project, Gillian Parekh, Jessica Vorstermans, and Paula Hearn* Chapter 8: Monitoring Individual Experiences: An Innovative Strategy to Initiate Social Change in the Exercise of Human Rights by Persons with Disabilities?, Normand Boucher and David Fiset* Section 3: Monitoring Laws, Policies, And Programs* Chapter 9: Disability-based Discrimination in India, Kalpana Kannabiran* Chapter 10: Effective and Equal Enjoyment of all Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms by Persons with Disabilities in New Zealand, Petra Butler* Chapter 11: Canada Tracks Disability Rights: Using a DRPI Model of Systemic Monitoring to Highlight Law and Policy Impacting Disability, Roxanne Mykitiuk and Yvonne Peters* Chapter 12: Federalism, Decentralization, and Human Rights: Level of Implementation of the CRPD in Developing Countries: Lessons from Latin America, Jose M. Viera* Section 4: Diverse Voices* Chapter 13: Disability Rights, Development, and the Roles of the Disability Movement from the International to the Grassroots, Samuel Kabue* Chapter 14: Hopes and Dilemmas of Africans with Disabilities: The Monitoring of Regional Disability Rights in Africa, Futsum Abbay* Chapter 15: Marginalizing the Subaltern Within: How to Effectively Engage with and Monitor Diverse Cultural Identities with Disabilities when Individual Identity Dominates the Collective Identity Framework, Huhana Hickey* Chapter 16: Securing the Full Participation of Persons with Disabilities and Their Representative Organizations in Disability Rights Monitoring, Rita M. Samson* Chapter 17: User/Survivor Monitoring Within the DPO Movement, Moosa Salie* Chapter 18: Monitoring Social Services for Persons with Disabilities in the Socioeconomic Context of Eastern Europe as a Tool for Enhancing Social Inclusion, Rado" Keravica* Conclusion: Debating Disability Rights Monitoring: Strengths, Weaknesses, and the Challenges Ahead, Paula C. Pinto* Contributors

