28 November 2024
PWDA joined the Australian Council for International Development (ACFID), the peak body for international development and humanitarian agencies and the Australian Disability and Development Consortium (ADDC), and 18 disability and international development organisations, to celebrate the release of the Australian Government’s new International Disability Equity and Rights Strategy (IDEARS).
Announced ahead of International Day of People with Disability on 3 December, the strategy reaffirms Australia’s leadership in advancing disability equity across international development, humanitarian assistance, climate action, and foreign and trade policy. Heeding the sector calls, the Government also announced an additional $12 million for assistive technology (AT) in the Indo-Pacific over four years. This is a vital investment that signals the Government’s ambition for immediate implementation of the new strategy.
For the first time, the Australian government has set a target for performance on disability equity across all international and humanitarian efforts, committing to raising the bar on inclusion and rights. The strategy sets a target for 60 per cent of all programming to be performing effectively on disability equity by 2026 with a staged approach to reach 70 per cent by 2030.
This commitment is strongly welcomed by the sector – with leading Australian international development and domestic disability organisations coming together over the past 12 months to call for the strategy to be ambitious, accountable, and resourced. “The Australian Government’s strategy provides a clear and actionable roadmap for advancing equity with people with disabilities in your region and globally,” said Kerryn Clarke, Executive Officer of ADDC. “Australia is setting the stage for real, lasting change that will enable people with disabilities not just to be in the room, but to have a seat at the table and lead the conversation.”
We commend and welcome the Government’s extensive consultations with people with disabilities in developing the strategy and its commitments. This echoes the disability movement’s calls of ‘nothing without us,’ and ensures that those most affected are central to the strategy’s design and implementation.”
Australia’s new strategy builds on its leadership in this area, being the first country to create a disability-specific international strategy and one of the first to sign the UN Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities. The sector remains committed to working with the Australian government towards achieving disability equity, so no one is left behind.
Read the full statement: Sector welcomes new development strategy advancing disability equity
Endorsed by:
- People with Disability Australia (PWDA)
- The Leprosy Mission Australia
- Mary MacKillop Today
- C BM Australia
- Australian Federation of Disability Organisations (AFDO)
- WaterAid Australia
- Opportunity International
- Plan International Australia
- Care Australia
- Fred Hollows Foundation
- MSI Asia Pacific
- Australian Doctors International
- Brien Holden Foundation
- ChildFund Australia
- Family Planning Australia
- RedR Australia
- Vision2020
- Nossal Institute for Global Health