European League of Stuttering Associations

ELSA, Zülpicher Str. 58 D-50674 Köln, Germany
Tel. +49 221 139 1106    fax + 49 221 139 1370
e-mail elsa@bvss.de
ELSA, 31 Grosvenor Road, Jesmond, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, NE2 2RL, Great Britain
Tel. +44 191 281 8003    fax+44 191 281 8003
e-mail elsa.europe@totalise.co.uk

NewsNotes Archive

APRIL 2003

Includes the EYDP Prize Competition - see below for details!!

In this issue:

  • The European Year of People with Disabilities (EYDP) 2003 - News and Links
  • Second Call - The 4th ELSA Youth Meeting
  • The Stuttering Information Network
  • News from the Bundesvereinigung Stotterer-Selbsthilfe e.V. (BVSS)
  • An ELSA Seminar - Stuttering Awareness in Strasbourg
  • 2004 World Congress for People who Stutter
  • Miscellaneous

Welcome

This is the third ELSA electronic newsletter, we thank you for continuing to subscribe and we hope you will continue to find it of interest. The newsletter has been funded by the European Commission as part of the European Year of People with Disabilities. The European Year is organised by the European Commission in collaboration with the European Disability Forum (EDF). The EDF is a European umbrella organisation representing more than 37 million disabled people in Europe. ELSA is a founding member of the EDF.

You may ask why people who stutter (pws) should get involved. There are 37 million reasons why. 37 million people with disabilities in the European Union. That's one in ten of us who have some form of disability.

Disabled people are people with equal rights. Disabled people are workers, consumers, tax payers, politicians, students, neighbours, family and friends. But disabled people are not treated that way.

A recent European survey shows there is a serious lack of understanding of what disability means and how many people it affects. Disabled people should be treated as equal citizens who have the power to speak for themselves, not as objects of pity or charity. Disabled people are often excluded from society through poor education and unemployment, leading to poverty.

2003 is an opportunity to change the future for disabled people. And a good future for disabled people means a good future for all people.

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