Disabled people-led organisations are joining together to demand justice
- Area of Work: Scottish Sensory Hub
- Type: News Item
- Published: 23rd October 2024

Disabled People-Led Organisations across Scotland are joining together for a fortnight of action and campaigning to demand justice.
Disability Equality Scotland, Glasgow Disability Alliance, Inclusion Scotland and Disabled People-Led Organisations (DPOs) across Scotland are joining together for a fortnight of action and campaigning to demand justice and deliver equality for disabled people. They need your support for this critical campaign.
Disabled people are in the midst of a perfect storm: austerity measures and the impact of cuts to services, benefits and budgets, together with the Covid pandemic, have had a disproportionate effect on disabled people. Simply put, they have experienced increasing poverty and inequality and human rights regressions and have been forgotten by Governments and left behind by those in power.
- 63% of Disability Equality Scotland survey respondents use independent living or lifesaving equipment and 75% of respondents said that they were very worried about their ability to pay energy bills (Winter Fuel Fact Sheet).
- 47% of Scots disabled people reported that they were struggling to keep up with their energy bills compared with 29% of non-disabled people and 47% of Scots disabled people reported that they had cut back on food compared with 32% of non-disabled people, (Inclusion Scotland’s Fuel Poverty Briefing 2024).
Glasgow Disability Alliance’s Summer Survey of 621 disabled people paints a bleak picture requiring immediate attention and actions. In this survey 97% of disabled people were concerned they had been forgotten in Government priorities and plans. The most recent Programme for Government reveals that their concerns were valid.
These organisations want to ensure that the Scottish Government takes urgent and bold action so that disabled people get the essential support they are entitled to.
- Disabled people make up 27% of the population in Scotland (October 2024 House of Commons https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-9602/CBP-9602.pdf
- Scotland’s Census 2022 found that the percentage of people reporting a long-term illness, disease or condition increased from 18.7% in 2011 to 21.4% in 2022 . Numbers reporting mental health condition have doubled and figures are still being analysed for people with learning disabilities/learning difficulties and developmental disorders so the total is higher than is currently known.
For too long now, disabled people have been denied basic rights that everyone else takes for granted – because the vital supports they need are missing; because policy incoherence deepens the poverty and inequality they face e.g. social care charges and because there is a lack of willingness to take action.
This is why Disability Scotland, Glasgow Disability Alliance and Inclusion Scotland have worked tirelessly with the Scottish Government for the past 20 months: they agreed aim was to develop a bold and action focused Disability Equality Plan which would improve lives.
Despite the Programme for Government 2023 commitment to deliver an Immediate Priorities Plan to address the cost of living and energy crisis of winter 2023 and the Programme for Government 2024 promising to Deliver on a Disability Equality Plan which would ensure the voices of disabled people would be at the centre of policy and decision-making, they are still waiting.
No actions have yet been taken. No commitment to meaningful actions has been made. No progress towards Disabled People’s Equality. As a result, disabled people and their DPOs are demanding justice.
#DisabledPeopleDemandJustice and they are demanding the following to make that happen:
Ask 1: Increase investment in the Advice in Accessible Settings Fund to enable a focus on accessibility of existing projects providing welfare rights and debt information and support.
Why? Because disabled people are facing the rising tide of extra costs of being disabled, barriers to work, and obstacles to securing social security benefits which provide an anchor in keeping them afloat.
Ask 2: Invest in Social Care and Scrap Social Care Charges including charges applied to recipients of the Independent Living Fund.
Why? Because social care charges plunge disabled people into deeper poverty, trapping them so that they cannot pursue opportunities and choices including participation in their families, communities and wider social and civic life and also including education and work opportunities.
Ask 3 Invest in and protect funding for Disabled People’s Organisations.
Why? Because disabled people have been systematically failed by a lack of plans and actions to address poverty, inequalities and thwarted life opportunities and we are routinely excluded. DPOs offer a lifeline to disabled people, uniquely telling them about their rights and helping them to reframe their oppression and work with others towards solutions to barriers. Emancipatory approaches reframe the source of disability and participatory methods provide collective advocacy and build community and belonging – reducing extreme isolation. DPOs enshrine and uphold the world wide slogan “Nothing About Us Without Us”.
Join the campaign over the next two weeks. You can find out more here.
End of page.
You may also like:
Accessible Voter registration Focus group
Continue readingComplete this survey if you are Deaf or have Hearing Loss to help inform improvements to Access to Work
Continue readingInterview-based research highlights the experiences of people with dementia, carers, and eye care professionals
Continue readingSign LOUD report launched on International Human Rights Day
Continue readingThe ALLIANCE is delighted to support the launch of a new BSL network for public bodies.
Continue readingThe ALLIANCE has produced a briefing for the Scottish Parliament debate on BSL, taking place on 11 December 2025.
Continue readingThis work aims to better understand both the incidence and needs of children with Usher Syndrome and their families
Continue readingManifesto sets out the priorities for the future of community Optometry in Scotland
Continue readingTake part if you work in adult audiology or cochlear implantation
Continue readingNew study commissioned by the BDA assesses the socio-economic value of access to British Sign Language for Deaf children and their families
Continue readingFrom 12.01am on 1 December 2025, Deaf and Deafblind BSL users will need the new app to access the service or use the website
Continue readingTake part in an exciting research study to help design a two-way translation app between BSL and spoken English
Continue readingTake part if you are Deaf, Deafblind, have a Visual Impairment, or are living with Multiple Sclerosis
Continue readingSponsorships available from Vision Collaborative Scotland
Continue readingNew SignPort app and web platform now live
Continue readingTake part in a study to improve knowledge of Charles Bonnet Syndrome
Continue readingRevision of the standards will support delivery of the Diabetic Eye screening programme in Scotland
Continue readingFinal call for organisations to take part in research on mapping adult Vision Impairment services in Scotland
Continue readingNew service expected to free up 20,000 hospital appointments a year
Continue readingA Cross-party Group on Deafness working group conducted a study into the declining numbers of QToDs
Continue readingUKAS accreditation is recognised throughout the healthcare sector as providing an important and impartial evaluation of quality of care
Continue readingMapping the Future of Adult Vision Impairment Community Services
Continue readingA team of parents, young people and professionals compile a list of the ‘Top 10’ most important research questions
Continue readingThe Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee investigated whether the Act has improved the lives of BSL users
Continue readingThe British Society of Audiology (BSA) issued new draft Practice Guidance on Deaf Awareness for public consultation.
Continue reading