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Inheritance,poverty, and disability
Authors:Nora Ellen Groce  Jillian London  Michael Ashley Stein
Affiliation:1. Leonard Cheshire Disability and Inclusive Development Centre, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, UK;2. Havard Law School, Cambridge, MA, USA;3. Harvard Law Project on Disability, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract:Inheritance is a significant means of transferring wealth from one generation to the next, and therefore increasingly attracts attention from researchers and policy-makers working on intergenerational and multidimensional poverty. However, until now disabled persons have been overlooked in these discussions. This oversight is particularly unfortunate because, as a group, the estimated one billion people with disabilities (some 15% of the world’s population) are among the poorest and most marginalized of the global population. Over the past decade, a small but growing literature has examined the recursive connections between poverty and disability throughout the developing world. In this paper, we argue that disabled individuals are routinely denied inheritance rights in many low-income and middle-income countries, and that this is a significant and largely unrecognized contributor to their indigence. The denial of inheritance is both a social justice issue and a practice that can no longer be overlooked if disabled persons are to be brought into the development mainstream.
Keywords:inheritance  disability  poverty  international development  disabled women  dowry  bridewealth
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