In the Washington Post, ΟγΈΫΑωΊΟ²ΚΧΚΑΟ Mississauga sociologist decries attempts to 'undermine disability rights' in the U.S.
![George H.W. Bush signing the Americans with Disabilities Act](/sites/default/files/styles/news_banner_370/public/disabilities.jpg?h=afdc3185&itok=aJAvtnFX)
Published: July 24, 2019
With the anniversary of the landmark Americans With Disabilities Act this week, David Pettinicchio of the ΟγΈΫΑωΊΟ²ΚΧΚΑΟ Mississauga has called attention to βthe wide-ranging efforts in recent yearsβ to undermine disability rights in the United States, particularly by congressional Republicans and the current administration.
The sociologist and author of Politics of Empowerment: Disability Rights and the Cycle of American Policy Reform writes in the Washington Post that, for decades, efforts to protect the rights of people with disabilities have been undercut by negative court rulings, legislative loopholes and political compromises.
The result, he says, βis a separate and unequal system of rightsβ in which people with disabilities are second-class citizens.