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Laurence Parent fights for dignity, advocates for change

750 students benefit from accommodations provided by Concordia's Access Centre for Students with Disabilities
September 18, 2012
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The President’s Report 2011 presents the highlights of the past academic year under the theme Big Thinking Adds Up, Strength in Numbers. The publication, now available online, presents profiles of six Concordians who are making invaluable contributions in their respective fields. Read more about the work of Laurence Parent below.

Laurence Parent
Laurence Parent

Laurence Parent is documenting the experiences of people with disabilities and the public transit system for her humanities PhD research project. The subject parallels her own journey from personal frustration to political activism.

Parent says Montreal’s transit system lags behind international standards. Wheelchairs can only access metro platforms in seven of Montreal’s 68 stations. Buses with wheelchair ramps are available on 160 routes, but are frequently plagued with mechanical problems. Parent says she can easily wait an hour between accessible rides.

She is no longer content to accept limited access to what she sees as a basic service.

Her views were shaped while she earned her MA in Critical Disability Studies in Toronto.

Not only did she gain theoretical perspective; she benefited from the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, which ensures access across public services. Her research will help her make the case to bring similar policies here.

Seeing the positive impact of Ontario's legislation led her to launch a movement on behalf of the 20,000 people with reduced mobility reliant on Montreal’s paratransit system. She is co-founder and vice-president of the Regroupement des activistes pour l’inclusion au Québec, an advocacy group addressing accessibility gaps in Montreal’s transit system. She also produced an award-winning short documentary on metro accessibility.

Parent is gaining momentum. She is one of eight members of the Inclusive Design Advisory Council of the planned Canadian Museum for Human Rights. The council is advising architects and planners on how to build the museum to accommodate the needs of people with a variety of disabilities.

“We are not just making the building accessible for visitors, but also for people who want to work there.”

Related link:
•  President’s Report 2011 



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