Taking human rights seriously in the National Care Service
- Written by: Cathy Asante — Scottish Human Rights Commission — Legal Officer
- Published: 7th March 2022

Cathy Asante reflects on the need for meaningful engagement with human rights within the National Care Service.
The Scottish Human Rights Commission has long expressed concerns that the existing social care system does not deliver people’s human rights in practice. It is a stark case of great promise and many of the right words about human rights, but a very different experience for those receiving social care.
We welcomed the Feeley Review and its recommendations for a radical shift in adult social care provision towards one with human rights, equity and equality at its heart. It may not have covered detailed content on human rights and exactly how they would be achieved but it embraced important elements which would represent a real shift.
The National Care Service proposals mention human rights a number of times but sadly they don’t take them much further. These proposals are the point where human rights need to be carefully engaged with. They need to be at the core, the foundation from which the structures are built. They cannot be tacked on after the fact if the impact on rights is to be any different.
The NCS presents a huge opportunity to realise human rights. Firstly, human rights guidance is there for the taking. The fundamental importance of the right to independent living (Article 19 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities) is very clearly indicated by Disabled People’s Organisations and in the purpose of social care articulated by the Feeley Review. The right means that “individuals with disabilities are provided with all necessary means to enable them to exercise choice and control over their lives and make all decisions concerning their lives”. It also means that empowering, individualised support which must be seen as a right, not social care.
The match is too clear to miss. What is more, we can go much further than that in understanding what the right means, its specific components, and what it requires of government and public authorities. The UN provides detailed guidance on all these aspects here (this link will take you away from our website). We have broken this down in our response to the NCS proposals and pointed out the connections to various elements of the system. There are clear opportunities to build the right to independent living into commissioning and procurement, eligibility and assessment, complaints and redress. Equally, they must be explicitly embedded in regulatory frameworks and workforce arrangements. This seems a clear case where a human rights based approach provides a guide; a clearer, more objective way to achieve the goals of a National Care Service.
Secondly, this is the time. There is, in fact, a need to start doing this exercise now. Scotland is well on the way to incorporating into Scots law a range of human rights which apply to social care, including the right to independent living. We should have a Human Rights Bill within the current parliamentary session which will come with duties on public authorities to ensure that they are realising rights such as independent living. If the system has been rebuilt, and so fundamentally rebuilt as creating a NCS, but the components of the right have not been built in, it will have to be retrofitted to meet these duties, which will make it much harder for an overworked system and staff to meet their duties.
One of the purposes of incorporation is to provide accountability, to address the gap between rhetoric and reality. Incorporating rights like independent living in a Human Rights Bill will allow for clear tracking of whether duties are being met, and provide routes of challenge if not. This is equally important in the development of the NCS. Gaps in accountability were a key strand of the Feeley Review and our own monitoring, highlighting problems both before and during the pandemic. While aspects of accountability are considered in the proposals, these primarily relate to the governance structures within and around the NCS and its accountability to Scottish Ministers. Significant aspects of accountability for individual social care decisions remain unaddressed.
There are certainly positives to be taken from the proposals. Had this exercise taken place ten, or even five, years ago, it is much less likely there would have been a stated intention to take a human rights based approach. But a HRBA means little if it does not explicitly engage with and act on the requirements of the relevant rights. As the Feeley Review pointed out, human rights must be consistent, intentional, and evident. This is a matter of process, certainly, but there is a real purpose at the heart of it. If the process takes the time to consider what it is told about the steps necessary to realise rights, then people should actually enjoy them in practice, without having to fight for them, without even noticing how it happened.
Taking a true HRBA would, no doubt, mean there is difficult work to be done. There are some real challenges posed by the right to independent living, not least its abundantly clear instruction to get rid of institutions of any kind. These are exactly the sort of challenges that have to be thought about at the outset so that careful plans can be made to achieve them in a realistic manner. And of course, the meaningful involvement of those who receive social care will be instrumental in reaching real world solutions that deliver rights in practice.
End of document.
End of page.
You may also like:
Cornell explores how we can build an environmental human rights-based culture
Continue readingLouise Coupland, Digital Health and Social Care Programme Manager shares her opinions on the national roll out of MyCare.scot.
Continue readingChris Mackie, Director of Digital, looks back at how ALISS has developed, grown, and innovated over time.
Continue readingCrohn’s and Colitis care in Scotland is at a pivotal moment. Urgent action is needed to tackle delays and poor access to vital services
Continue readingThe ALLIANCE’s Lewis Shaw reflects on the importance of rehabilitation support.
Continue readingIsabella Goldie of Deafblind Scotland reflects on the value of partnership work.
Continue readingFind out more about the inaugural Power of Attorney Day taking place on 22 April 2026.
Continue readingDr Hannah Tweed reflects on 20 years of the Scottish Sensory Hub, the important work they do and why it matters.
Continue readingAs part of our 20 year anniversary, Kerry shares her reflections on how far the ALLIANCE has come, our achievements, and our impact.
Continue readingIn her latest TFN column, our Chief Officer Sara Redmond reflects on 20 years since Scotland moved to put children at the centre of policy.
Continue readingCancer care in Scotland is at a critical moment. Macmillan is calling for urgent action ahead of the parliamentary elections in May
Continue readingMhairi Campbell reflects on Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) not being recognised as having a severe impact on life.
Continue readingLucy Mulvagh shares how she used the Centre for Public Policy Practice Fellowship to examine prevention and its barriers to implementation
Continue readingLaura from Perth and Kinross HSCP shares how we can celebrate World Social Work Day through the lens of 'What Matters To You?'.
Continue readingReflections on the Children (Withdrawal from Religious Education) Bill
Continue readingLouise Hall from Pain Association Scotland reflects on the event she delivered as part of Self Management Week 2025.
Continue readingAct Now for Autistic Rights calls for a transformative Bill for autistic and neurodiverse communities
Continue readingIn the next decade, the role of digital in health and social care must embed our digital human rights principles to reduce inequalities.
Continue readingRead some reflections from ALLIANCE colleagues, who had the opportunity to sponsor and attend Scotland's Annual Human Rights Conference.
Continue reading“Our Collective Voice” is a hopeful vision for the next five years, and I encourage ALLIANCE members to bring it into their own campaigns.
Continue readingBy standing together, we can help ensure that everyone in Scotland has access to the compassionate, high quality palliative care.
Continue readingALLIANCE Scottish Sensory Hub Manager Dr Hannah Tweed reflects on the launch of the BSL network for public bodies.
Continue readingSimone Janse van Rensburg reflects on the impact of their Women Living Well event which featured as part of Self Management Week 2025.
Continue readingThe ALLIANCE’s Women’s Health Lived Experience Group reflect on their input to Phase 2 of the Scottish Government’s Women’s Health Plan.
Continue readingWellbeing Scotland’s Chief Clinical Officer Ashleigh Ronald highlights why we must shift stigmatising narratives around child abuse.
Continue reading