The human right to communicate and our need to listen: Learning from people with a history of childhood communication disorder.
Jane McCormackElise BakerKathryn CrowePublished in: International journal of speech-language pathology (2017)
This paper gives voice to children and adults with communication disorder. In listening to these voices, the impact of communication disorder on the right to communicate and on other human rights can be heard, and the need for a response is clear. However, the challenge is to determine how the voices of these individuals, and others like them, can be enabled to exert real influence on practice and policy so communication disorder will no longer be a barrier to attainment of their human rights.