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Non-contributory cash transfers: An instrument to promote the rights and well-being of children with disabilities in Latin America and the Caribbean

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Non-contributory cash transfers: An instrument to promote the rights and well-being of children with disabilities in Latin America and the Caribbean

Author: Ullmann, Heidi - Atuesta, Bernardo - Rubio García, Mónica - Cecchini, Simone Physical Description: 111 páginas. Editorial: UNICEF Date: March 2021 ECLAC symbol: LC/TS.2020/154

Description

This study establishes a sociodemographic profile of children with disabilities, the majority of whom are living in poverty, and analyses non-contributory cash transfer programmes in Latin America and the Caribbean that cover or prioritize families with children or adolescents with disabilities. These programmes may be the gateway to the establishment of full inclusion routes for children and adolescents with disabilities and their families, both in the social and the labour sphere. While the region has seen an increase in the number of cash transfer programmes that cater to or prioritize families with children or adolescents with disabilities, there is a need for comprehensive action to ensure accessible services, strengthen selection tools as well as recipient registries and disability certification processes, and establish cash transfer amounts that cover all costs associated with childhood disability.

Table of contents

Executive summary .-- Introduction: objectives, methodology and scope of the study .-- I. Concepts and evidence that guide the study .-- II. A socio-demographic overview of children with disabilities in Latin America and the Caribbean: poverty and rights violations .-- III. Non-contributory cash transfer programmes that include or prioritize families with children with disabilities in Latin America and the Caribbean: historical evolution and main characteristics .-- IV. Design and operation of selected non-contributory cash transfer programmes that include or prioritize families with children and adolescents with disabilities .-- V. Conclusions and recommendations.