FLAC TCD - Disability Rights

Page 73

Introduction The provision of education has a transformative effect on those living with disabilities. This chapter aims to assess the scope of the right to free primary education as it applies to children with disabilities in Ireland. In this chapter, Irish legislation and initiatives that have been implemented in the deliverance of education to children with disabilities will be examined. I.

The right to an “appropriate” education under Irish law

Article 42.4 defines one of the only socio-economic entitlements under the Irish Constitution, which consecrates the right to a free primary education. This section states that “The State shall provide for free primary education and shall endeavour to supplement and give reasonable aid to private and corporate educational initiative, and, when the public good requires it, provide other educational facilities or institutions with due regard, however, for the rights of parents, especially in the matter of religious or moral formation.235” Article 42.4 has often been litigated in the Irish courts in the context of children with disabilities and their right to an appropriate education under Irish law.236 As is the case with most constitutional provisions that confer individual rights, the ambit of Article 42.4 has fluctuated over the decades in accordance with trends of judicial interventionism. The characterisation of what was first considered an “appropriate education” had quite narrow origins, with Kenny J in the High Court asserting that education was primarily “scholastic” in nature.237 Fortunately, this view was quickly overturned at Supreme Court level, with Ó’Dálaigh CJ favouring a far more holistic vision of what constitutes an appropriate education. Herein, the learned judge described education as “essentially, the teaching and training of a child to make the best possible use of his inherent and potential capacities, physical, mental and moral.”238 On foot of this broad vision of what an “appropriate education” should strive to achieve, numerous cases arose throughout the 1990’s concerning children with mental and physical disabilities who sought to compel the State to provide them with a better standard of education.239 In O’Donoghue v Minister for Health,240 The applicant was a child

235

Article 42.4 Oran Doyle and Tom Hickey, Constitutional Law: Texts, Cases and Materials (2nd edn, Clarus Press 2019) 514. 237 Ryan v Attorney General [1965] IESC 1, [2009 ] IR 294. 238 Ryan v Attorney General [1965] IESC 1, [2009 ] IR 294 per Ó’Dálaigh CJ at para 37. 239 Oran Doyle and Tom Hickey, Constitutional Law: Texts, Cases and Materials (2nd edn, Clarus Press 2019) 514. 240 [1993] IEHC 2, [1996] 2 IR 20. 236

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Articles inside

Scope and limitations of the Act

12min
pages 124-130

Overview of the Act

1min
page 120

Changes implemented by the Act

5min
pages 121-123

Changes introduced by the Act

10min
pages 113-119

Wardship in Ireland

5min
pages 110-112

Future Directions and Recommendations for Reform

9min
pages 104-109

International Comparative: Legal Models for Workplace Inclusion

7min
pages 93-97

Overview of Irish Social Welfare Supports

9min
pages 98-102

Ireland’s comprehensive Employment Strategy for People with Disabilities

10min
pages 87-92

disabilities

4min
pages 82-85

Primary legislative and policy context for persons with disabilities and employment in Ireland

1min
page 86

Educational Needs Assessments and Curriculum Design Case-study: School closure during Covid 19 and the rights of children with

8min
pages 78-81

The Irish Probation Service

3min
pages 70-72

The right to an ‘appropriate’ education under Irish law

2min
page 73

The Criminal Trial of Persons with Disabilities

5min
pages 65-67

The Employment Equality Directive

11min
pages 57-64

Framework in Response to the UNCRPD

9min
pages 46-51

The Irish Prison Service

4min
pages 68-69

The European Accessibility Act

8min
pages 52-56

United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities A Critical Commentary on the Evolution of Ireland’s Legal and Policy

6min
pages 43-45

The right to political participation for persons with disabilities

2min
page 26

Case Study: ‘Invisible’ Disabilities

6min
pages 21-25

Differing Models of Disability

3min
pages 15-16

The European Convention on Human Rights and The Protection of Persons with Disabilities

6min
pages 40-42

Page

9min
pages 6-14

Denmark and Rosenlind v Denmark

8min
pages 34-39

Progress in lifting administrative and legal barriers in political participation for persons with disabilities Analysing the European Court of Human Rights Decisions in Strøbye v

13min
pages 27-33

Defining Disability in Irish Law

7min
pages 17-20
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