Project
The Disability Inclusion Index
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Amount Funded
188,047 EUROProject Duration
01 Jan 2019 - 31 Dec 2020 -
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Lead organisation
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The Agency for Disability and Development in Africa (ADDA) visions an inclusive society in which all persons have equal opportunities, regardless of anyone’s impairment and/or special needs. ADDA enhances the potential of children, youth and adults with disabilities within their communities and environments while advocating for their inclusion and active participation in mainstream sustainable development programmes as well as celebrating diversity, improved livelihoods, and self-actualisation. Inclusive services are part of ADDA’s day-to-day work and inclusion is enshrined in ADDA’s Research, Training and Innovation Hub. The hub is at the heart of ADDA in terms of generating and documenting best practices and solutions in human-centred disability inclusion. ADDA works with persons with disabilities (PWDs), their organisations (DPOs) and duty bearers to promote access to services.
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Organisation
The Agency for Disability and Development in Africa (ADDA) visions an inclusive society in which all persons have equal opportunities, regardless of anyone’s impairment and/or special needs. ADDA enhances the potential of children, youth and adults with disabilities within their communities and environments while advocating for their inclusion and active participation in mainstream sustainable development programmes as well as celebrating diversity, improved livelihoods, and self-actualisation. Inclusive services are part of ADDA’s day-to-day work and inclusion is enshrined in ADDA’s Research, Training and Innovation Hub. The hub is at the heart of ADDA in terms of generating and documenting best practices and solutions in human-centred disability inclusion. ADDA works with persons with disabilities (PWDs), their organisations (DPOs) and duty bearers to promote access to services.
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Project
The Disability Inclusion Index project is about co-creating, piloting, documenting and sharing a Disability Inclusion Public Participation Index in Kenya. This index will then be used to advocate and will be benchmarked at a National Disability Inclusion workshop. The participation index measures existing expertise and knowledge gaps within Disabled Persons Organisations (DPOs) and among Persons with Disabilities (PWDs), including the advocacy capacity of people and communities (assessing their confidence to participate), and negotiation practices necessary to influence. It also measures County Public Participation practices (such as communication, accommodation, information materials) and benchmarks inclusion against international best practices including recommendations on how to bridge exclusion gaps. Public participation is more than getting the opinion of DPOs or PWDs or any section of the community. Instead, true participation requires three elements: to be present (for PWDs this means accessibility and minimum accommodation, effective communication), to belong (the process is fun and the benefits of participation are well known), and to take part (engaged, informed).
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The Disability Inclusion Index project is about co-creating, piloting, documenting and sharing a Disability Inclusion Public Participation Index in Kenya. This index will then be used to advocate and will be benchmarked at a National Disability Inclusion workshop. The participation index measures existing expertise and knowledge gaps within Disabled Persons Organisations (DPOs) and among Persons with Disabilities (PWDs), including the advocacy capacity of people and communities (assessing their confidence to participate), and negotiation practices necessary to influence. It also measures County Public Participation practices (such as communication, accommodation, information materials) and benchmarks inclusion against international best practices including recommendations on how to bridge exclusion gaps. Public participation is more than getting the opinion of DPOs or PWDs or any section of the community. Instead, true participation requires three elements: to be present (for PWDs this means accessibility and minimum accommodation, effective communication), to belong (the process is fun and the benefits of participation are well known), and to take part (engaged, informed).
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Shifting advocacy gears from fragmented approaches to synergised networks
A fragmented approach to advocacy beleaguered many of the DPOs (Disability Persons Organisations) working in the space. The Agency for Disability and Development in Africa (ADDA) project sought to co-create, pilot, document and share a Disability Inclusion Public Participation Index. It was then to create advocacy around the index and organise a national Disability inclusion and benchmarking workshop. The participation index was to measure existing expertise and knowledge gaps within DPOs and among PWDs, including the advocacy capacity of people and communities i.e. confidence to participate and negotiation practices necessary to influence change. It was also to measure County Public Participation practices (such as communication, accommodation, information materials) and benchmark inclusion against international best practices with suggestions on how to bridge exclusion gaps.
A key result has been commitment by the county government of Nakuru to make more efficient the process of getting views from PWDs regarding budgeting. ADDA worked with the county government to mobilise PWDs to participate in public hearings on the budget. In Nairobi, the county government undertook to set up a one stop service delivery desk and improve physical accessibility, especially at their offices at City Hall Annexe, Nairobi. The county government of Makueni on the other hand developed a cabinet memo in 2019 to guide inclusion programmes in the county.
“Through this process, we are now clear on which areas face deficiency and we can now lobby for enhanced budgetary allocation for our department and to enhance service delivery” Ms Jane Waruguru, the Deputy Director Gender, Education, Disability and Social Services
The project also saw the establishment and strengthening of 6 networks of Disabled Persons Organisations (DPOs) in Nakuru, Nairobi, Kajiado, Makueni, Kwale and Kiambu Counties. These networks have started holding their respective county governments accountable in service delivery and inclusion in governance. In 2020, while the DPO Network in Kwale reviewed and submitted a memorandum regarding the Annual Development Plan (2020/2021), in Nairobi, the DPO Network developed and submitted a memorandum on the Nairobi PWD Amendment Bill. The Network in Kajiado engaged the County Government to advocate for inclusive infrastructure and Civic processes while in Nakuru, the Network gave an input on the PwD fund.
ADDA identified and is working with 3 strategic partners to pursue agendas on economic empowerment (Vision 4 Youth Housing Cooperative), advocacy for inclusion (Sight for Relief Organisation) and mental health/ neurodevelopmental disabilities (Andy Speaks for Special Needs). In the end, ADDA developed and successfully launched a participation portal that would enable PwDs to access information and contribute to activities such as legislation, budgeting and planning at the County level.
ADDA employed the Analyse, Organize, Assert approach that provided self-introspection to help the county governments and DPOs to identify areas of strength and improvement. Based on this, actors were able to develop improvement plans while establishing structures and system. In terms of tools, ADDA used the Disability Inclusion and Equity Training (DIET) as a primary step to establish knowledge levels on matters related to inclusion. To establish the baseline on policy and practices affecting Disability Inclusion, ADDA used the Disability Inclusion Score Card (DISC) used in the different foums, focussing on 6 domains to develop action plans based on specific inadequacies that were identified.
Three important changes have occurred as a result of this project intervention. First, DPOs are demonstrating greater cohesion and are pursuing joint advocacy initiatives. Second, county governments are more open to developing inclusion strategies the moment they understood and appreciated their internal challenges. Lastly, the online participation platform has demonstrated the potential and possibilities of convergence between county governments and DPOs. Makueni specifically, is considering using the platform to complement their one way SMS based platform as it allows for bi-directional communication
One lesson learnt is that while projects are designed in a linear approach, social issues defy this logic and call for constant and systematic adjustments. In Kajiado, instead of departmental heads, the project worked with lower level staff to influence action at the higher levels. In Kwale, the team built the capacity of DPO networks to put pressure on the county government.