COVID-19 Infection Control Measures – Cross-Pressure Between the Right to Work and the Right to Health – A Norwegian Case Study of Service Provision to Persons With Cognitive Disabilities
Sammendrag
Work participation and work facilitation represent basic human rights for everyone. Work represents an important platform for welfare and well-being, but compared to the general workforce in Norway, persons with cognitive disabilities are severely under-represented. When workplaces locked down under the first COVID-19 outbreak spring 2020, some people were made redundant whilst many continued their work from home. The lockdown affected persons with cognitive disabilities through lockdown of workplaces, vocational training centres and even day activity centres. The scheme of working from home was not as obvious or facilitated for this group, as for other employees. When also visits were banned and common areas for socialisation were locked down, the consequences of these lockdowns were exacerbated. In this chapter we have examined and discussed the COVID-19 restrictions in Norway and how they affected the basic human rights of persons with cognitive disabilities, and also how such rights can be promoted through legislation, governance and service provision.
Forlag
EmeraldSitering
Kane AA, Melbøe LM: COVID-19 Infection Control Measures – Cross-Pressure Between the Right to Work and the Right to Health – A Norwegian Case Study of Service Provision to Persons With Cognitive Disabilities. In: Genova, Scavarda, Swiatkiewicz-Mosny. Disability Welfare Policy in Europe: Cognitive Disability and the Impact of the Covid-19 Pandemic, 2023. Emerald Group Publishing Limited p. 97-117Metadata
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