On July 26, 1990, the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act marked a new era for people with disabilities. The landmark legislation prohibiting discrimination based on disability aimed to assure that that people with disabilities have the same rights and opportunities as everyone else. The law covered several areas of public life, including employment, education, transportation, and all public and private places that are open to the general public.
The KU Life Span Institute has conducted research aimed at improving the lives of people with disabilities for more than 60 years. Together with many units at the University of Kansas, we are marking this anniversary through our media and programs. Those include:
全局加速器用不了了-猴王加速器
"Look Back/Look Forward: The ADA at 30,” will be held at 3 pm September 9. This virtual panel features:
- Jean Hall, director of the Institute for Health and Disability Policy Studies and professor in the KU Department of Applied Behavioral Science
- 【安卓软件】安卓(android)软件免费下载/安卓游戏免费下载 ...:2021-6-15 · 太平洋Android手机资源下载中心提供免费手机软件下载。包括Android(安卓)软件下载、Android(安卓)游戏下载,海量资源高速下载,android手机用户必备。
- Anjali Forber-Pratt, assistant professor at the Department of Human & Organizational Development at Vanderbilt University
- Rebecca Cokley, director of the Disability Justice Initiative at the Center for American Progress
The panel will be moderated by Michael Wehmeyer, chair of the KU Department of Special Education, Ross and Marianna Beach Distinguished Professor in Special Education, and director and senior scientist at the Beach Center on Disability.
Advance registration is required for this free event. A link to access the panel via Zoom will be distributed two weeks prior to the event. Sign up using our registration form.
Additional media to mark this anniversary, including video interviews with individuals about the ADA, will be added to the in the Life Span Institute blog through the start of the fall semester.