Disability, Human Rights, and Information Technology
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About this ebook
Disability, Human Rights, and Information Technology addresses the global issue of equal access to information and communications technology (ICT) by persons with disabilities. The right to access the same digital content at the same time and at the same cost as people without disabilities is implicit in several human rights instruments and is featured prominently in Articles 9 and 21 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. The right to access ICT, moreover, invokes complementary civil and human rights issues: freedom of expression; freedom to information; political participation; civic engagement; inclusive education; the right to access the highest level of scientific and technological information; and participation in social and cultural opportunities.
Despite the ready availability and minimal cost of technology to enable people with disabilities to access ICT on an equal footing as consumers without disabilities, prevailing practice around the globe continues to result in their exclusion. Questions and complexities may also arise where technologies advance ahead of existing laws and policies, where legal norms are established but not yet implemented, or where legal rights are defined but clear technical implementations are not yet established.
At the intersection of human-computer interaction, disability rights, civil rights, human rights, international development, and public policy, the volume's contributors examine crucial yet underexplored areas, including technology access for people with cognitive impairments, public financing of information technology, accessibility and e-learning, and human rights and social inclusion.
Contributors: John Bertot, Peter Blanck, Judy Brewer, Joyram Chakraborty, Tim Elder, Jim Fruchterman, G. Anthony Giannoumis, Paul Jaeger, Sanjay Jain, Deborah Kaplan, Raja Kushalnagar, Jonathan Lazar, Fredric I. Lederer, Janet E. Lord, Ravi Malhotra, Jorge Manhique, Mirriam Nthenge, Joyojeet Pal, Megan A. Rusciano, David Sloan, Michael Ashley Stein, Brian Wentz, Marco Winckler, Mary J. Ziegler.
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Disability, Human Rights, and Information Technology - Jonathan Lazar
Disability, Human Rights,
and Information Technology
PENNSYLVANIA STUDIES IN HUMAN RIGHTS
Bert B. Lockwood, Jr., Series Editor
A complete list of books in the series is available from the publisher.
DISABILITY, HUMAN
RIGHTS, AND
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
Edited by
Jonathan Lazar
and
Michael Ashley Stein
Copyright © 2017 University of Pennsylvania Press
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher.
Published by
University of Pennsylvania Press
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112
www.upenn.edu/pennpress
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
A Cataloging-in-Publication record is available from the Library of Congress.
ISBN 978-0-8122-4923-1
CONTENTS
Foreword
H. E. Ambassador Luis Gallegos
Introduction
Jonathan Lazar and Michael Ashley Stein
PART I. PARTICIPATION AND INCLUSION
1. Standards Bodies, Access to Information Technology, and Human Rights
Judy Brewer
2. Accessible ICTs and the Opening of Political Space for Persons with Disabilities
Janet E. Lord
3. Web Accessibility for People with Cognitive Disabilities: A Legal Right?
Peter Blanck
4. The Intersection of Human Rights, Social Justice, the Internet, and Accessibility in Libraries: Access, Education, and Inclusion
Paul T. Jaeger, Brian Wentz, and John Carlo Bertot
PART II. GOVERNMENT AND GOVERNANCE
5. Public Financing of Information Technology and Human Rights for People with Disabilities
Deborah Kaplan
6. Using Provincial Laws to Drive a National Agenda: Connecting Human Rights and Disability Rights Laws
Ravi Malhotra and Megan A. Rusciano
7. Access to Justice
Fredric I. Lederer
8. Open Government and Digital Accessibility
Timothy Elder
PART III. SPECIFIC APPLICATIONS AND TECHNOLOGIES
9. E-Books and Human Rights
Jim Fruchterman
10. Accessibility and Online Learning
Mary J. Ziegler and David Sloan
11. Who Owns Captioning?
Raja Kushalnagar
12. Information Privacy and Security as a Human Right for People with Disabilities
Jonathan Lazar, Brian Wentz, and Marco Winckler
13. How Does Inaccessible Gaming Lead to Social Exclusion?
Joyram Chakraborty
PART IV. INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
14. The Pivot Model of Policy Entrepreneurship: An Application of European Ideas in the Global South
G. Anthony Giannoumis, Mirriam Nthenge, and Jorge Manhique
15. The Accessibility Infrastructure and the Global South
Joyojeet Pal
16. ICT Access, Disability Human Rights, and Social Inclusion in India
Sanjay S. Jain
Notes
Contributors
Index
FOREWORD
H. E. Ambassador Luis Gallegos
Information and communication technology (ICT) is changing our world. Ubiquitous mobile telephony, television, computers, tablets, software, websites, the Internet of Things, electronic kiosks, and digital interfaces of home or office appliances have transformed the way human beings communicate, learn, work, and play around the world—not only in the developed North but also among countries in the developing South.
And while the availability of sophisticated information technology used to be restricted to governments and the corporate world, billions of individual users benefit from it today. I personally was educated with paper and pencils, but today, with my family spread around the globe, instant electronic free communications are a daily reality. These would have been unthinkable only a few years ago. On a given day I interact from Quito, Ecuador, with Europe, the Americas, and Asia.
This collection of essays that Jonathan Lazar and Michael Ashley Stein have coedited, Disability, Human Rights, and Information Technology, comes at a very important and timely moment in the quest for inclusive societies. It underlines the imperative to ensure equal access to ICTs among the one billion persons living with disabilities around the world. The challenge is obvious: can anyone participate equally in society today without being able to communicate with a mobile phone, watch important news on TV, have access to emergency communications, or use a computer, e-reader, ATM, or website? Are there any activities, from work to education or justice, that can be conducted without interfacing with ICTs?
As is abundantly demonstrated in this book, ICTs can present insurmountable barriers for persons with disabilities or, to the contrary, can offer unprecedented solutions to accommodate persons with sensorial, cognitive, or physical limitations. The good news is that there are solutions today allowing persons with most types of disabilities to use ICTs ranging from mobile telephony to TV, kiosks, software, or websites, and assistive technologies leveraging the power of ICTs have made giant steps forward because of unprecedented and increasingly inexpensive solutions such as voice recognition, screen reading, and text-to-speech, as well as multiple alternative modes of electronic communications. However, as discussed in the following chapters, the actual awareness of, availability of, and required support for those technologies to fully benefit persons with disabilities are still severely lagging in most regions for essential types of activities, and subtle legal, societal, or economic barriers remain.
The urgency of this challenge is pressing indeed. Beyond essential accommodations that remove accessibility barriers, the use of technology also ends more fundamental forms of discrimination by leveling the field for those excluded because of their differences,
enabling new forms of communication and interaction that reveal their creativity and strengths in all aspects of human endeavors. Technologies are therefore an essential success factor for the full inclusion of persons with disabilities and the full realization of their rights.
December 13, 2016, marked the tenth anniversary of the approval by the United Nations General Assembly (A/RES/61/106) of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) and its Optional Protocol. This is a good time for all stakeholders to engage in taking stock of where we are, what has been achieved, and what needs to be done to promote and protect the rights of persons with disabilities.
The CRPD has the merit of offering a universal framework that makes social changes possible while elevating disability rights to a prominent role in the process of inclusion of and nondiscrimination against one billion persons with disabilities. I have always believed that a person may be born with a disability or may acquire it by sickness, accident, war, or for whatever other reason, but certainly as we age, we will have a disability. I mention this because the universality of disability in the human condition is not considered one of the main reasons that brought us to the halls of the UN in New York to advance the cause of rights of persons with disabilities. But I believe that it should be. It is not, therefore, a problem of a minority; it is a problem of all of us.
Article 9 of the CRPD stipulates that to enable persons with disabilities to live independently and participate fully in all aspects of life, States Parties shall take appropriate measures to ensure to persons with disabilities access, on an equal basis with others, to the physical environment, to transportation, to information and communications, including information and communications technologies and systems.
It goes on to outline that states parties shall also take appropriate measures to promote other forms of assistance and support to persons with disabilities to ensure access to information; to promote access to new information and communication technologies and systems, including the Internet; and to promote the design, development, production, and distribution of accessible information and communications technologies and systems at an early stage, so that these technologies and systems become available at minimum cost.
As we measure, in cooperation with disabled persons’ organizations around the world, progress made by states parties in promoting ICT accessibility in accordance with Article 9, contrasting results appear: progress occurs in laws, regulations, policies, or programs, but the actual availability of accessible ICTs for persons with disabilities remains limited, in large part because of weak capacities among states parties to implement their commitments. A majority of countries, for instance, do not have any substantial implementation of accessible TV, accessible mobile telephony, or accessible websites.¹ Less than a third of states parties take accessibility into account in their public procurement of ICTs, while the other two-thirds do not, unwittingly creating new barriers for millions of citizens and public workers with disabilities, in large part because of lack of awareness.²
With such data points in mind, a very important contribution of this book, thanks to the depth and variety of its sectorial analysis of ICT accessibility, will be to help close this gap in awareness among states parties and other stakeholders. By exploring multiple facets of issues and solutions in ICT accessibility, it will also further facilitate imagining new steps toward equal access by persons with disabilities to information and knowledge.
The impact of information technology on our lives is hard to predict in both a positive and a negative sense. But as an optimist, I believe in the use of technology to bridge the social gaps in our societies. I am also certain that the access of persons with disabilities to these technologies will open up new horizons in their lives, from education to employment, from inclusive development to a more rights-based legal system.
Our world is changing and should change at an equal pace for persons with disabilities in all fields of human endeavor. The chapters in this book will contribute to the better understanding of the importance of those critical linkages among human rights, disability, and information technology.
Introduction
Jonathan Lazar and Michael Ashley Stein
People with disabilities have a civil and human right to access the same digital content at the same time and at the same cost as people without disabilities. In a majority of cases, technology solutions already exist to make that situation a reality. Furthermore, when digital content is incorporated into the initial design and manufacture of information and communication technology (ICT), it can be made accessible to persons with disabilities at little or no added cost. To illustrate, when web content is designed from the start to be accessible, the expected costs are only 1 to 2 percent of the costs of the overall web design project.
An example of easily attained inclusion via provision of a standardized technological feature in a popularly used device is the incorporation of text-to-speech modality in iPhones, iPads, and other iOS devices. Text-to-speech functionality, known colloquially as a screen reader, comes standard on Apple devices at no additional cost to purchasers. Making digital devices, e-books, and web content accessible allows equal access for people with disabilities and also increases the customer base for companies who then sell their products, services, and technologies to an increased number of consumers. Some retailers, notably Wal-Mart, have long recognized the business case for maintaining fully accessible websites.
Yet despite the ready availability and minimal cost of technology to enable people with disabilities to equally access ICT—as well as the increasing use of that technology by consumers without disabilities—prevailing practice around the globe results in the exclusion of those individuals. This is true both for the public sphere, where open access to government is one measure of transparency and legitimacy, and for the private sector, which has a vested economic self-interest in engaging the largest possible number of consumers. The arbitrary and irrational nature of these circumstances is frustrating and perplexing.
Notably, despite clear legal obligations under Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act to make technology purchased, developed, or acquired by the U.S. federal government accessible to users with disabilities (including public-facing systems like websites and internal technology for federal employees), many federal websites remain inaccessible. This is equally true of American state and local government websites operating under similar legal obligations—Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)—even those mandated with providing emergency evacuation and assistance information. Moreover, there is very little transparency in federal, state, and local governments in terms of documenting the accessibility of technologies or how the accessibility process is managed. In consequence, some prominent disability rights advocacy groups have taken action to remedy glaring problems. For instance, the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) filed a lawsuit in February 2016 against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services because electronic communications were inaccessible between the agency and blind users. The NFB likewise participated in a lawsuit against the New York State Board of Elections in June 2016, precipitated by the state’s inaccessible online voter registration.
Strikingly, some companies go beyond neglecting their legal and social obligations to include consumers with disabilities and actively resist making their hardware, software, and websites accessible. Amazon provides a case study in recalcitrance. Since the Kindle e-book device was first introduced in 2007, there have been multiple problems related to accessibility through various iterations of the device despite repeated efforts by disability rights advocates to educate Amazon about these barriers. Subsequently, and in response to Amazon’s continued and conscious exclusion of users with disabilities, the disability rights community persuaded federal government officials to cancel millions of dollars of contracts for Kindle devices as being in violation of federal law prohibiting disability discrimination. In March 2016, Amazon signed an agreement with the NFB to make its products more accessible.
Peapod is another example of a company that actively refused to address the needs of consumers with disabilities in spite of clear economic benefits. Much like people without disabilities, there are people with disabilities who prefer ordering their groceries online and having them delivered to their homes and offices. Nevertheless, despite several requests from consumers with disabilities that Peapod make its website and mobile app accessible, the company refused to do so. In November 2014, after an investigation, the U.S. Department of Justice entered into a settlement agreement with Peapod that required the online store to provide equal access to customers with disabilities by making its website and mobile app accessible.
Why do government agencies and departments violate their legal and fiduciary duties by resisting making otherwise publicly available information accessible and available to members of the public with disabilities? Why do otherwise rational income-maximizing companies break laws and work against their own self-interest by refusing to make their websites accessible to consumers with disabilities? Such actions are flummoxing.
New technologies create interesting questions at the intersection of human-computer interaction, disability rights, civil rights, human rights, international development, and public policy. Indeed, more frontiers of human-computer interaction are unsettled than resolved, and this is especially true when they involve persons with diverse disabilities. Some quandaries arise where technologies have advanced ahead of existing laws and policies, as is the case in considering the intellectual property implications of captioning. Other complexities arise where legal norms have been established but not yet implemented, or where legal rights are defined, but clear technical implementations are not yet established, for instance, interface accessibility for people with cognitive impairments. Additional questions arise in allocating limited resources, especially within the context of developing countries. Cutting across all these fields are issues relating to the promulgation and enforcement of standards; and always undergirding these issues are the crucial matters of cultural recognition, acceptance, and inclusion of persons with disabilities in societies.
This book addresses the globally pertinent issue of equal access to and inclusion in ICT by persons with disabilities. Within the United States, as touched on earlier, the right to equal access is expressed in terms of antidiscrimination prohibitions under both the Rehabilitation Act and the ADA. More globally, this right is implicit in several human rights instruments, features prominently in Articles 9 and 21 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), which went into operation in May 2008, and is the subject of the Marrakesh Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons Who Are Blind, Visually Impaired, or Otherwise Print Disabled, which has now opened for State ratification. The right to access ICT, moreover, invokes cross-cutting civil and human rights issues, among them freedom of expression, freedom of information, political participation, civic engagement, inclusive education, the right to access the highest level of scientific and technological information, and participation in social and cultural opportunities. Accordingly, the authors of each chapter have been encouraged to consider relevant domestic laws (including the respective national-level human and civil rights of persons with disabilities), international human rights, disability studies, and technological, sociological, and cultural perspectives. The authors have likewise been encouraged to provide appropriate international examples to illustrate these concepts in a global setting.
In February 2015, we convened an exploratory seminar at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University on the topic Frontiers in United States Law: Equal Access to Information Technology for People with Disabilities.
The seminar examined legal questions at the intersection of human-computer interaction and disability rights law in the United States and focused primarily on topics that have not been clearly decided by legal statutes or case law. The participants chosen were a cross section of scholars in computer science and law, civil and human rights advocates, practitioners, and government policy makers. Five themes were examined at the seminar: captioning and legal ownership, accessible instructional materials in higher education, technology access for people with cognitive impairments, e-book access for people with print disabilities, and access to courtroom documents and technology. Some of the participants and their work are included in chapters of this book.
The exploratory seminar focused on legal and technical issues arising within the United States. The scope of this volume is broader, however, than the exemplary discussion we enjoyed over those two days at Radcliffe. The focus of this collection goes beyond ICT accessibility in the United States to include Europe and parts of the developing world. This book is likewise broader in considering the role of international law, and especially human rights, in enabling access to ICT on behalf of the globe’s one billion persons with disabilities. Although many of the chapters cut across multiple themes, we present the chapters in four sections: Participation and Inclusion
; Government and Governance
; Specific Applications and Technologies
; and International Development.
We are excited to have a group of distinguished, knowledgeable, and passionate authors address many fundamental topics at the intersection of disability rights, civil rights, human rights, intellectual property, international development, human-computer interaction, accessibility, public policy, and sociology. At the same time, and because of limitations of space, it is not possible to cover every potential topic of interest as much as is deserved and desired. For example, inclusive health care and transportation are two fields that come to mind as crucial to the intersection of disability rights and the use of technology, especially as they relate to independence. In addition to the topics covered in the book, there are a number of important and interesting but underresearched and consequently unresolved topics that we hope researchers will address in the future. For now, we sketch out four areas in dramatic need of further exploration: accessible educational testing; telecommunications laws as human rights enablers; consumer rights laws as human rights enablers; and North-South/South-North development transfers.
Accessible Educational Testing
In the past, education tests were primarily written and occasionally oral. Now, a large and ever-increasing percentage of educational testing is offered via computer. In theory, computer use should create a level playing field, allowing people with various disabilities to equally take part in these standardized assessments. However, many educational tests are technically inaccessible to people using assistive technology and may also contain questions that are biased against people with disabilities. Furthermore, there are still some institutions that believe that individuals who take tests using assistive technology ought to have their use of assistive technology marked on their record by a statement that they took the exam under nonstandard conditions,
thereby flagging their disability and denigrating the test results. The increased reliance on standardized testing throughout K-12 education, as well as the importance of testing for admission to college and graduate school, makes this topic especially urgent for increased study.
Telecommunications Laws as Human Rights Enablers
When people reflect on ICT accessibility, they correctly think of the relevant laws as being those of disability rights, human rights, or civil rights. Yet there is potential for telecommunication law, the statutes and policies regulating communication devices and transmissions, to be used also for improving equal access to technology and content for people with disabilities. For instance, disability rights laws can cover the purchasers of technology, such as government agencies and recipients of government funding. However, telecommunication laws that regulate the manufacturing of devices can outlaw the manufacturing or distribution of inaccessible devices. Doing so shifts the onus of assuring accessibility from the purchaser to the manufacturer. In the past, telecommunication laws have been responsible for requiring relay service, as well as captioning, for people who are deaf or hard of hearing. Recent telecommunication laws, such as the U.S. Communications and Video Accessibility Act, specifically require accessibility of smartphones, among other devices. Likewise, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission has stated that Internet service providers are required to provide equal access for people with disabilities. It is expected that the ongoing development of policies related to net neutrality, for instance, will have an impact on equality of access for people with disabilities. This area is rapidly evolving, with enormous implications for people with disabilities.
Consumer Rights Laws as Human Rights Enablers
Consumer rights laws have the potential to be used as tools for increasing human and civil rights. Government compliance monitoring, related to consumer rights, often examines topics such as consumer fraud and consumer privacy. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission, for instance, protects consumers by stopping unfair, deceptive or fraudulent practices in the marketplace.
¹ When users with disabilities pay higher prices for services or receive a lower quality of goods relative to consumers without disabilities, there may be a violation of existing consumer protection laws. When consumers are not given information about whether a device or software application is accessible, a situation arises where the consumer with a disability must first make a purchase and then afterward determine whether the technology is accessible. This practice can be viewed as deceptive and parallels truth-in-labeling laws where consumers have the right to know what they are being sold. Other areas of consumer protection may include identity theft and consumer scams that target people with disabilities. The potential of consumer rights laws to protect the human and civil rights of people with disabilities has not been adequately researched.
North-South/South-North Development Transfers
An underexamined law and development issue that is central to the notion of creating and disseminating accessible ICT for persons with disabilities is the transfer of actual technology between states, nonstate private actors, or some combination of these entities, as well as the sharing of recommendations and best practices for using those technologies.² These matters were addressed for the first time by a human rights treaty in the CRPD, which contains an article on international cooperation requiring such collaboration between states. Yet little practical information and guidance have been developed on how to implement this mandate in the context of limited resources, whether state or privately funded. For instance, it seems quixotic and inappropriate to premise dissemination of information regarding basic services, such as availability of vaccinations or location of clean water and sanitation, on the possibility that people in Botswana will have iPads with Internet access (even if some do). However, a radio transmission or a mobile phone app might provide this same information in a more immediately practical manner, although access to those technologies themselves requires certain disability-specific accommodations. In this respect, it is important not to strike a colonial attitude but to acknowledge that although many technological transfers will flow from the North to the South, many innovations and creative solutions will be generated and disseminated from the South to the North. Thus, although many localities in the United States have established emergency evacuation notices in case of natural disaster, those notices are frequently inaccessible to users with disabilities. Conversely, the government of Ecuador deployed a network of fieldworkers using GPS technology to identify and be able to subsequently assist persons with disabilities across that country, including those living in hard-to-reach terrain, in the event of natural disaster. This is only one example of the underexplored phenomena of developing states, precisely because they lack resources, developing creative and more cost-effective use of ICT to enable persons with disabilities.
We are grateful to the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University for supporting the exploratory seminar that served as a foundation for this book. We thank our university homes, Towson University Department of Computer and Information Sciences for Jonathan and Harvard Law School and the University of Pretoria Faculty of Law Centre for Human Rights for Michael, for supporting us in this work. We acknowledge with gratitude the immense efforts of our chapter authors and express appreciation to the editors at the University of Pennsylvania Press. We likewise acknowledge the generosity of artist Robert Tinney for granting permission to use his classic artwork on technology and disability for the cover of this book. Jonathan also would like to thank Howard and Ann Georgi for their support in providing non-ICT accommodations on his multiple trips to Harvard to work on this book. On a final note, we praise, thank, and encourage our colleagues in the various communities in which we work who inspire us to continue pushing for a more inclusive world of technology.
PART I
Participation and Inclusion
CHAPTER 1
Standards Bodies, Access to Information Technology, and Human Rights
Judy Brewer
Introduction
The Web has been a focal point of accessibility-standardization efforts since 1997 through work within the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)¹ Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI),² and increasingly also through work throughout the Web community. The scope of work done through WAI has ranged from promoting awareness of the need for accessibility of the Web, to development of guidelines and technical specifications, coordination with research communities, and coordination with other standards organizations to ensure international harmonization of accessibility standards. During this time, accessibility of information on the Web has improved greatly. However, many accessibility barriers remain; and although many Web innovations improve accessibility, new barriers are still often inadvertently introduced as technologies advance.
This chapter explores the landscape of Web accessibility from the perspective of development of accessible information and communication technology (ICT) standards. It examines the importance of addressing accessibility support in mainstream technologies from the design stage onward; the need to engage different stakeholder groups, including end users, at the design table; and the challenges of addressing accessibility for people with disabilities within the intensely competitive and constantly evolving technology sector.
The Relevance of Standardization to Ensuring Accessibility of ICT
For many people who have worked on human rights, including disability rights, standards organizations may not be the first vehicle one thinks of when considering options for influencing the design of key technologies. Standards bodies are sometimes considered relevant primarily for capturing established practices in their fields rather than as a venue through which to help shape social aspects of technology design.
Yet because ICT occupies such a central role in society and the pace of technology change is constantly accelerating, it has become critically important to ensure that accessibility requirements are addressed at the design stage of ICT product and service development. After they have been released to the market, accessibility products and services may be difficult to retrofit—and by then, people with disabilities have already been left behind by the latest innovations. Standards bodies provide an opportunity to address accessibility principles early in the pipeline of emerging technologies.
Most ICT requires some degree of standardization in order to ensure interoperability with other parts of the technology infrastructure. Some standards organizations provide an effective setting in which to solicit perspectives and help articulate requirements from across a global community.
W3C WAI has been instrumental in developing guidelines and specifications that address a wide variety of user needs for accessibility and has been able to achieve broad international consensus on these. It also provides a coordinated process of accessibility review of mainstream Web standards in areas as diverse as graphics, media, mobile web, payments, security, digital publishing and e-readers, geolocation, automotive navigation, TV, and more. It has also enabled identification of potential accessibility barriers at early stages in the design process, when problems can still be relatively easily addressed. For accessibility requirements that require dedicated specifications or application programming interfaces (APIs), W3C provides a forum in which accessibility experts and advocates can work hand in hand with developers of mainstream technologies to ensure architecturally compatible design approaches for accessibility requirements. This aspect of WAI work is pursued through the Accessible Platform Architectures (APA) Working Group (previously the Protocols and Formats Working Group).³
Accessibility of ICT as a Human Right
Today, some of the most critical tools of society—for education, employment, commerce, health care, civic participation, entertainment, and more—are those used in the information society. The Web is one of the most important tools for communication and interaction, facilitating access to and integration into society. In the relatively short span of twenty-five years, the Web has evolved from an interesting and nice-to-have luxury to an essential means of interacting with the world. Even in areas that are off the electric grid or devoid of landline telecommunications, or both, access to the Internet and the Web through mobile devices has been increasing rapidly. There is a growing commitment to providing low-cost or no-cost global Internet services that will help reach the great majority of the world’s population.⁴ Although the availability of digital technology has increased access to information for many people with disabilities, the accessibility of that newly available information is still inconsistent, so for people with disabilities it is sometimes possible to get to Web content but not possible to perceive, understand, or interact with that content. If access to the Internet and the Web becomes nearly ubiquitous, yet unaddressed accessibility barriers in ICT remain, this could paradoxically exacerbate social and economic inequities that are already present for people with disabilities just at the time when the digital environment is finally providing the tools and opportunity to undo those inequities.
This need for the tools of the information society to be accessible to people with disabilities is articulated in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), adopted by the United Nations in 2006. The CRPD restates, with specific reference to the needs of people with disabilities, basic rights that people without disabilities in many countries have been able to take for granted for years but that people with disabilities have often been denied.
Articles 9 and 21 of the CRPD, among a number of other provisions, address the right of accessibility to information and to the tools of the information society for people with disabilities. To paraphrase the portions relating to ICT from these two articles, the CRPD directs that state parties to the convention shall take appropriate measures to ensure persons with disabilities access, on an equal basis with others, to information and communications, including information and communications technologies and systems, and electronic services and emergency services (from Article 9(1)(b)).⁵ Additionally, the CRPD directs that states shall take all appropriate measures to ensure that persons with disabilities can exercise the right to freedom of expression and opinion, including the freedom to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas on an equal basis with others and through all forms of communication of their choice, including information in accessible formats and technologies, and communications (from Article 21(a, c, e)).⁶
In these two articles, it is significant to note that both the tools of the information society and the rights and freedoms afforded by these tools to people with disabilities were important to the framers of this convention, and that these are just as important as the many other rights enumerated in this treaty, including access to education and to the built environment. For people with disabilities around the world, the CRPD has been an important milestone in societal recognition of equal status.
Prior to the development of the CRPD, some countries already had treaties, legislation, or policies that promoted or required accessibility of the Web, or, more generally, of accessibility of information and communication systems. In some countries, these have taken a civil rights approach; in other cases, they have focused on procurement approaches that require accessibility of ICTs purchased or acquired for government usage. The first of these was Section 508,⁷ originally added to the U.S. Rehabilitation Act in 1986 and amended several times since then. In 2014, the European Norm 301 549, which also took a procurement approach, was adopted in Europe.⁸ An increasing number of countries have already developed or are developing similar policies.
Examples of Accessibility Barriers and Requirements for Web Content
The scope of Web accessibility encompasses a broad range of functional requirements across different disabilities and the needs of older users. For someone who is hard of hearing or deaf watching a web-based TV broadcast that is interrupted by an announcement of emergency evacuation information, access to real-time streaming captions or sign language can be lifesaving. For a student with a visual disability taking an exam based on interpretation of complex visual data, description of visually presented information embedded in an infographic may be essential to fair assessment of her or his knowledge. For someone with an intellectual disability who is trying to interpret health-care information from a website, consistency of navigation menus and understandability of language used on a Web page may be important. For someone with limited fine motor control who is trying to fill out and submit an online financial form before it expires and she or he has to restart the process, an option to extend the time to fill out a form may be critical. For someone with a photosensitive seizure disorder, being able to avoid strobing lights in web content may be important. For an older user who may have changes in vision, hearing, dexterity, or short-term memory, or a combination of these changes, accessibility support on the Web may be useful regardless of whether that individual considers herself or himself to have a disability.
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The Web can be made accessible for persons in all of these situations, but to do so requires several things working together in concert. It requires web-accessibility guidelines that set out accessibility requirements; features in web specifications that support provision of accessibility information, such as captions and descriptions of images; browsers or mobile applications that can render the embedded accessibility information; content authors who provide the necessary accessibility information; an awareness of the benefits of using a common set of guidelines internationally; policies to ensure that accessibility guidelines are used; and evaluation tools and processes to assess whether a website conforms to accessibility.
Information on many websites is dynamic and interactive. For instance, Web users may need to expand nested menus or drag and drop objects on a Web page. For people who are using computers with assistive technologies such as screen readers or voice recognition, compatibility between browsers or mobile applications and assistive technologies may be essential to accessing information on a Web page or in Web applications, or completing tasks such as filling