Title: Laws, policies and trends in a multicultural perspective
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2Laws, policies and trends in a multicultural
perspective
- Group presentation in SNE4110
- Group VUGESK
3Group members
4Presentation Outline
- Presentation
- Comments and questions by other groups
- Comments and question by lecturers
- Intermision
5Agenda
6Our countries - Overview
7Ethiopia
- Ethiopia is Africas oldest Independent country.
Apart from a five year occupation by Mussolini
(Italy), it has never been colonized. - But the country is better known for its periodic
droughts and famine, its long civil conflict and
a boarder war with Eritrea. - Population 74.2 million (UN, 2005)
- Capital Addis Ababa
- Area 1.13 million sq km (437,794 sq miles)
- Major languages Amharic, Oromo, Tigrinya, Somali
- Major religions Christianity, Islam
8Background data
- Life expectancy 46 years (men), 49 years (women)
(UN) - GNI per capita US 160 (World Bank, 2006)
- Population growth (annual ) 1.9
- Life expectancy at birth, total (years) 42.5
- Fertility rate, total (births per woman) 5.4
- Mortality rate, infant (per 1,000 live births)
110.4 - Mortality rate, under-5 (per 1,000) 166.4
- Immunization, measles ( of children ages 12-23
months) 71.0 - Primary completion rate, total ( of relevant age
group) 50.6 - School enrollment, primary ( gross) 77.0
- School enrollment, secondary ( gross) 27.8
- School enrollment, tertiary ( gross) 2.5
- Ratio of girls to boys in primary and secondary
education () 72.8
9Georgia - ??????????
- Population 4, 474,404 million
- Official languages Georgian (own alphabet)
- Capital Tbilisi
- Annual population growth rate 1
- Major religion Orthodox Christianity
- GNI per capita (Atlas method) (current US)
1,060. (in 2004) - Life expectancy women77 years and men 69
years.
10Background data
- Types of schools Primary, secondary and tertiary
. - Special schools.
- Literacy rate (adults) 98.9 in 1998
- Gross enrolment ratio (GRT) 89 in 1989 (These do
not include children with disabilities) - Life expectancy in Georgia 69 years for men and
77 for women. - No accurate statistical data on the disabled
children in Georgia, but several trends can be
indicated. The number of disabled children is on
the increase. Congenital diseases account for
most of the disabilities( approx. 80) - UNICEF registered 10,772 disabled children in
Georgia - There is no necessary and reliable information on
the conditions of these children. -
-
11Kenya
- Country The Republic of Kenya
- The government Coalition
- Capital Nairobi
- Population 34,707,817 approximately 10 lives
with some type of disability or impairment (WHO) - Population below poverty line 50
- GDP rate 5.2
- Unemployed 40
- Religion Christianity, Islam Hinduism , African
traditional religion - Official languages English and Kiswahili
12Background data
- Total fertility rate 4.91 children born per
woman - Birth rate 39.72 births /1,000 population
- Growth rate 2.57
- Death rates 14.02 / 1000 population
- Infant mortality rate total 59.26 deaths per
1,000 live births male _6.92, female_56.54 - Literacy definition age 15 and over can read and
write total population85.1 - Education system 8-4-4
- General Data on SNE
- 10 of the population has a disability.
- 25 are the school going age.
- Out of 750,000, an estimated 90,000 identified
and assessed. - 14,614 are enrolled in SNE programs
13Spain
- Population 44 395 286 inhabitants (2006)
- Annual population growth rate 0,65 (2005)
- Area 506 000 Km²
- Capital Madrid
- Political Parliamentary monarchy
- GNI per capita US 27 542 (2005)
- Life expectancy 75,9 years (men) / 82,8 years
(women) - Mortality rate infant 4 (per 1000 live births)
- Official languages Spanish. (Also Catalan,
Galician and Euskera) - Religion 80 Catholics / 12 atheist and
agnostics
14Background data
- Illiteracy rate 2 (older than 15 years)
- Rate of persons with dissabilities 9 (3 528 222
inhabitants) - Disability by type
- Mobility 809 383
- Visual 697 778
- Hearing 665 479
- Autonomy 561 830
- Learning 335 426
- Behavioral 338 519
- Speech 190 264
- Others 2 921 641
15Uganda
- Population Estimated over 28 million persons
(2006) - 2005 27.8million, growing at 3.5
- Life expectancy is 45 50 years
- Tentative Infant Mortality rate was 80.2 per 1000
live births - Total fertility rate 7.1 (2006)
- Source www.ubos.org
- Language
- Official language English
- Other local language as many as the districts
- Sign language
- Political Establish as the Republic of Uganda
- Source www.nyulawglobal.org
- Economic
- GNI/capital 250.0 (2005)
- 9.2 million (38) below the poverty line
- Religion Catholic, Anglicans, Muslims,
Pentecostal and Others - International Participation Uganda has committed
herself on the following United Nations
Convention on Human Rights
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17Background data
- Children less than 15 years of age 49 of the
population - Children below 18 years of age 56 of the
population - Literacy rate was 65 (10 years and above)
- Data on special needs
- Both Inclusive and Special Education
- Recognition of sign language as a media of
instruction in school. - Persons with disability take more than 10 of the
total population - Primary school enrollment of children with
disabilities estimates 170,893 - Mentally challenged (45,425) Visually impaired
(40,316) - Hearing Impaired (48,354) Physically Impaired
(39,049) and Orphaned children (42,802) - Recognition of sign language as a media of
instruction in school.
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19Vietnam
- Capital Hanoi
- Government Communism
- Population 84,238 (Mid-2005)
- Population growth (annual ) 1.0
- GNI (current US) 44.6 billion
- GNI per capita (current US) 540.0
- Life expectancy 70.3
- Infant mortality rate17.4 per 1,000 live births
- Mortality rate, under-5 per 1,000 23.2
- 54 ethnic groups Kinh (Viet) nearly 90, 53
other over 10. - Official language Vietnamese
- Main religions Buddhism (which fuses forms of
Taoism and Confucianism), Christianity
(Catholicism and Protestantism.
20 Background data
- General education in Vietnam
- Primary completion rate, total ( of relevant age
group) 100.8 (2003) - School enrollment, primary ( gross) 98.0
- School enrollment, secondary ( gross) 73.5
- School enrollment, tertiary ( gross)10.2
- Ratio of girls to boys in primary and secondary
education () 94.3 - Literacy rate, adult total ( of people ages 15
and above) 90.3 - SNE related data (No fixed number)
- (Survey data of MOLISA)
- Number of PwDs (in 2003) 5.3 million(6.63 of
total population) - (WHO) Number of PwDs is approximately 10 of the
population (8.3 million) - Nearly 8 percent of Vietnamese households with
PwDs, most of which are poor. - (MOET) School-aged CwDs nearly 1 million
- (WHO) 1.2 million CwDs
- 230,000 CD go to school, account for 24.221.
- SNE teacher training institutions 4
universities, 3 pre-education teacher training
colleges and 7 provincial colleges. - 105 SNE schools/centres, 10 of which changed to
SNE resource centres. - 2,500 schools with inclusive settings.
- 1 Monitoring Report on the Implementation of
the Ordinance on the PwDs by National Assembly
Committee of Social Issues, June 2006
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22One more issue
- The effects of the Agent Orange (AO)/dioxin used
by the US during the war in Vietnam. - Over 72 million liters of toxic chemicals in
Southern Vietnam, 44 million liters containing
the agent orange composed of 170 kg of dioxin
(from 1961 to 1971) a deadly chemical that
causes genetic changes like cancer and birth
deformities in the affected people. - All these can be passed down to the victims next
generations, again causing numerous severe
diseases such as paralysis, mental retardation,
blindness, deafness and deformities. - About 2 million people directly affected by the
agent orange and about 200,000 affected children.
- On 24 July 1998, the Red Cross Society of Vietnam
established the Agent Orange Victims Protection
Fund to help alleviate the consequences of the
agent orange. ((White book of Human rights in
Vietnam MOF)
23EDUCATION, HEALTH CARE, SOCIAL WELFARE, AND
HUMAN RIGHTS Law and Policies
24Education
25Education
26Health Care
27Health Care
28SOCIAL WELFARE
29SOCIAL WELFARE
30HUMAN RIGHTS
31HUMAN RIGHTS
32Similarities Differences
33Common laws and policies in our countries
34Different laws and policies in our countries
35Different laws and policies in our countries
36Adaptation of laws and policiesReasons for why
we should adapt any of the laws in each others
country
37SERVICES AND PROGRAMES
38Common services and programes in our countries
- Advocacy and lobbying
- Early Intervention Service
- Special Education services and programs
- Habilitation and Rehabilitation
- Training teachers in SNE
- Community-based training program.
- Vocational Training
39Services and programs in each country
40Services and programs in each country
41Early intervention services
42Early intervention services
43Standard Rules for Equalization of Opportunities
44Salamanca declaration
45Needs of each country
46Needs of each country
47Group process
- Members having too much to give, and therefore
becoming difficulty to define very brief - High spirit of cooperation and the desire to
accomplish the task. - Division of tasks and later mini-presentation of
at ones countrys information
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