Healthlink Worldwide

 

Projects and Issues

More information on:

 

Disability and inclusion - Disability Knowledge and Research Programme

Policy research

Children at school, Rwanda

The Policy research part of the Disability Knowledge and Research programme comprised of three research areas; DFID UK research, in-country research, and a series of small-scale research projects.

Its purpose, managed by Healthlink Worldwide, was to assist DFID to develop policies and processes to support the mainstreaming of disability and to ensure that the Disability KaR’s knowledge and research outputs are responsive to DFID’s needs and effectively communicated to DFID.

The Policy Project saw the placement of a Disability Policy Officer in DFID to provide DFID with expert technical policy analysis on disability issues.

DFID research
The officer's first task was a detailed mapping of DFID and disability issues, the report of which concluded that although there were scattered disability initiatives, disability had not been mainstreamed within the Department. This corresponded with that of another report commissioned by the Disability KaR programme at the same time, "Disability KaR: Assessing connections to DFID’s poverty agenda".

A final report by the Policy Officer; "Disability, Poverty and the Millennium Development Goals: Relevance, challenges and opportunities for DFID", brought together all of the Policy Officer's work as well as findings from other parts of Disability KaR in a comprehensive set of recommendations on the way forward for DFID and disability.

In-country research
The Policy Officer's mapping report recommended that the mainstreaming of disability should become a central concern of the entire programme. This underpinned further research commissioned by the Policy officer and three research projects that were carried out in India, Rwanda and Cambodia. The research aimed to be relevant and useful to the DFID country offices themselves, as well as the work of Policy Division and in particular the new Exclusion, Rights and Justice (ERJ) Team.

Small-scale research
A further four in-country research projects were commissioned by the Project Policy Officer. The three of these were carried out by disabled researchers in the South and the fourth involved disabled people in every aspect of the work. These projects looked at: