“…In this process, certain groups of individuals are systematically disadvantaged and discriminated against on the basis of their ethnicity, race, religion, sexual orientation, caste, descent, gender, age, disability, HIV status, migrant status or place of residence (Beall & Piron, 2005). Social exclusion is a multidimensional and dynamic concept, which operates at micro and macro layers of social fabrics (Maldonado, Pogrebnyakov, & Van Gorp, 2006), and systematically excludes an individual with disability from political, educational, cultural and economic dimensions as well as social life of the community (Islam, 2015). Social exclusion is not about a lack of material resources; it is rather a complex social phenomenon that is closely linked with the complexity of powerlessness that often results from inadequate social participation, lack of cultural and educational capital, and inadequate access to services.…”