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Alternative reporting to the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

Alternative reporting to the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Module 7.2. Objectives. Module flow. Understand the purpose and content of alternative reports to the Committee Understand the process of drafting and submitting alternative reports.

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Alternative reporting to the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

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  1. Alternative reporting tothe Committee on the Rightsof Persons with Disabilities Module 7.2

  2. Objectives Module flow • Understand the purpose and content of alternative reports to the Committee • Understand the process of drafting and submitting alternative reports • Civil society/NHRIs and the Committee • What is an alternative report? • Structure of the report • Methodology • Data collection • Content of the report • Tips for recommendations • Submitting the report to the Committee • Follow-up

  3. The reporting cycle Civil society NHRI Civil society NHRI STATE submits report COMMITTEE’s follow-up COMMITTEE list of issues STATE implements recommendations STATE submits answers COMMITTEE’s concluding observations COMMITTEE’S SESSION Civil society NHRI

  4. What is an alternative report? The main objective of this report is to offer complementary information to that provided by the Government for the [Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities] in order to offer some concluding observations to help towards the better implementation of the Convention Alternative Report Spain 2010 - CERMI

  5. Methodology BUILD A COALITION INITIAL REVIEW OF KEY ISSUES LEGAL ANALYSIS DATA COLLECTION ANALYSIS AND IDENTIFICATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS REVIEW BY CONSTITUENCIES AND FINALIZATION

  6. Data collection • Laws and policies • Secondary materials: • Statistical institute • Ministries • United Nations and World Bank • National human rights institutions • Academic sources • Complaint such as court cases, complaints to the ombudspersons • Primary research • Quantitative – household surveys • Qualitative – interviews with rights-holders, expert advice

  7. Example: non-discrimination • The Committee’s reporting guidelines request information on: • Ability of persons to use the law for protection against discrimination • Effective measures to guarantee legal protection • Policies and programmes to achieve de facto equality

  8. Example: non-discrimination • The Spanish Government responded: • Legislation ensures full compliance with article 5 • However, some legislation might need to be reviewed in the light of the Convention • Effective supervisory and sanctions mechanisms are in place

  9. Example: non-discrimination • The Spanish alternative report stated: • Legislation is not in compliance with the Convention • requirement of 33 per cent disability • Supervisory and sanctions mechanisms are ineffective • No data available • No action on 10 complaints submitted • No regional coverage • Procedure is slow

  10. Tips for recommendations • Be clear • Only one action per recommendation • Identify responsible actors • Make recommendations measurable if possible • Propose a time frame for implementation where relevant • Link the recommendation with a particular implementation challenge • Avoid vague or general recommendations

  11. Example: recommendation onnon-discrimination The Committee recommends that the State party systematize the collection, analysis and dissemination of data, disaggregated by sex, age and disability; enhance capacity-building in this regard; and develop gender-sensitive indicators to support legislative developments, policymaking and institutional strengthening for monitoring and reporting on progress made with regard to the implementation of the various provisions of the Convention.

  12. Structure of the report • Executive summary • Table of contents • Description of the methodology • Background information • Key issues: • Definitions, general principles and obligations • Substantive rights • Rights of women, girls and boys • Specific obligations • Recommendations

  13. Submitting the reportto the Committee • When? • With the State report • Before the list of issues • Before the constructive dialogue • Meeting the Committee? • The session prior to the constructive dialogue • At the session • How? • crpd@ohchr.org

  14. Follow-up • Issue a press release • Hold a press conference • Continue the alternative report coalition • Meet ministry staff • Meet parliamentarians • Meet United Nations country teams • Hold a national conference • Hold workshops on specific issues • Assist in implementation • Monitor and report on implementation

  15. Sources • Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities • Committee’s reporting guidelines (CRDP/C/2/3) • “Human rights and disability: alternative report Spain 2010”. Available from www.cermi.es • Initial report of Spain (CRPD/C/ESP/1), www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/CRPD/Pages/Session6.aspx (accessed 9 August 2012)

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