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navigation Disability Rights

D.D.A. guide: Joining in

Sport

A person with a disability has a right to take part in sporting activities in the same way as people without a disability.

This means a person with a disability must not be excluded from playing a sport if he or she is:

A person with a disability should also not be excluded from any administrative or coaching activities associated with the sport. For example, if a person with a disability has the necessary skills to play cricket or swim competitively, he or she cannot be excluded because of asthma or a hearing loss.

Clubs and associations

A person with a disability has a right to be a member of a club or association in the same way as a person without a disability. This includes sporting, social and licensed clubs, drama or music groups, political parties, business associations, and self-help groups.

What is expected?

The Disability Discrimination Act (D.D.A.) makes it against the law for clubs and associations to discriminate against a person because of his or her disability. This means clubs and associations cannot:

The Act also means that the premises and facilities of clubs and associations should be accessible to people with a disability. (See the fact sheet The Ins and Outs of Access.) Like other areas of the D.D.A. a defence of  "unjustifiable hardship"  may be available.

 

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