DID4all is funded by the Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) to promote disability-inclusive development, provide quality resources to the development sector, and help ensure that Australian Government funded development activities are inclusive of people with disabilities.
This website has been designed under a partnership between DFAT and CBM Australia. Content is provided by CBM Australia, as part of CBM Global’s Inclusion Advisory Group, and the Nossal Institute for Global Health, University of Melbourne.
The Inclusion Advisory Group is an initiative of CBM Global Disability Inclusion. We partner with the disability movement to influence organisations, institutions and systems to realise the rights of persons with disabilities. We are a global network of advisors, disability movement and associates. We bring development and humanitarian policy and programming expertise, provided in collaboration with the disability movement, who bring representation of their members, expertise, and lived experience.
The Nossal Institute for Global Health, University of Melbourne, works to strengthen the quality, affordability and inclusiveness of health systems in the Asia and the Pacific region through practical research, learning and cooperation. We seek to understand the operation of systems in the real world and use systems thinking to advance health equity, inclusion and sustainability. Our multi-disciplinary team establish and extend the evidence base for strengthening health systems and extending universal health coverage to ensure access to health care and to promote well-being across our region’s diverse communities. We support evidence building, capacity strengthening, applied research and evaluations, policy development and work in partnerships.
Both organisations have a strong commitment to disability-inclusive development. Our partnership aims to build the capacity, policies and systems of both disability and development stakeholders to facilitate disability inclusive development. It has a focus on capacity development, technical assistance and operational research to build the evidence base for effective disability-inclusive development.
Frequently asked questions
Disability-inclusive development (DID) specifically seeks to ensure that people with disabilities are able to both participate in, and benefit from development activities on an equal basis with others.
DID promotes effective development by recognising that, like all members of a population, people with disabilities are both beneficiaries and agents of development. An inclusive approach seeks to identify and address barriers that prevent people with disabilities from participating in and benefiting from development.
The explicit inclusion of people with disabilities as active participants in development processes leads to broader benefits for families and communities, reduces the impacts of poverty, and positively contributes to a country’s economic growth. Therefore , without intentional efforts to address the inequalities experienced by people with disabilities, unintentional exclusion will continue, and the global goals and targets cannot be achieved.
The 2022 global report on health equity for persons with disabilities estimates that approximately 16% of the world’s population has a disability. In addition, DFAT’s Development for All Strategy 2015-2020 calls upon development programs to incorporate the principles of disability inclusion into their work.
To be effective in reducing poverty, development must actively include and benefit people with disabilities. Disability-inclusive development provides opportunities for people with disabilities to participate on an equal basis with others, and realise their full potential. This enables countries to harness the potential contribution of all citizens, maximising opportunities for poverty reduction and sustainable economic growth. People with disabilities are as entitled to human rights as every other person and should be included in all aspects of society. They have enormous potential to contribute to their community.
Article 32 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) recognises the responsibility of countries that are States Parties to the Convention to include people with disabilities in their international development efforts.
The United Nations has reaffirmed the need for the post-2015 development agenda to take account of people with disability to ensure we ‘leave no one behind’.
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade staff who have registered on the DID4all site can submit requests for technical assistance through the ‘Requests’ tab on the main menu after logging in to the secure part of this site. Other organisations are welcome to contact the CBM-Nossal Institute Partnership and discuss how we may be able to assist.
Registration for the secure part of this site is open (only) to all Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) staff. Please click on the ‘register’ button at the top of Home page, or from the login page, and follow the prompts.
DID4all can provide a variety of services to assist you to develop and implement disability inclusive programs and policies. This may include technical assistance with the design and review of in-country development programs; analytical support for strategy and policy development; and desk-based research and thematic issues papers or guidance notes. It may also include discrete pieces of research, or support to ensure proposed research is disability-inclusive. If you are not sure what assistance you need we are also happy to have a more general discussion and develop the scope of your request for assistance together.
Material on the unrestricted part of this site is free to access.
All DID4all helpdesk requests by staff of the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) are covered by a standing contract, with automatic approval of requests for technical advice of up to 3 days (21 hours), and requests requiring more time requiring DIS approval.
Any other requests for assistance are dealt with on a case by case basis and are usually fee for service. Please contact us to discuss further.