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Edited by Eric Rise,
University of Delaware
   

   
Perspectives on Disability, Discrimination, Accommodations, and Law: A Comparison of the Canadian and American Experience
   

Wayne Thomas Oakes

       
   

Oakes compares disability discrimination laws in Canada and the United States. He argues that in the United States, disability law has failed to achieve many of its objectives. Indeed, in American courts, disability plaintiffs almost always lose. By comparison, in Canada plaintiffs win more frequently. Canadian disability protections rely on human rights laws, which are quasi-constitutional and broadly construed. By contrast, in the United States, the definition of disability under the ADA is more limited.

Considering the theoretical basis for disability protections and the desirability of extending accommodations in both employment and education, Oakes concludes that disability laws require reform in both countries: in Canada passage of proactive legislation and in the U.S. a refined ADA.

       
  Wayne Thomas Oakes holds a LLM from Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto and a JD from the University of Connecticut School of Law. He has also acquired a MS from Columbia University, a MA from the University of California at Los Angeles, a MPA from Queen's University, and a BES from the University of Waterloo, Canada. He currently works as an attorney in West Hartford, CT.
       
    x, 270 pages. Index, bibliography. ISBN 1-59332-073-6.
$70. Published.