“…The rights-based approach in development, though, has not been without its critics, from within development or from the peripheries. Much of this critique of the RBA has various serious implications for disabled people: lack of guidelines on how to implement it; implementation problems, including cultural and contextual insensitivity; lack of government funds, strategy and commitment and ineffective monitoring and enforcement (Uvin, 2004); the problem of universality versus cultural relativism (Hansen and Sano, 2006); power biases towards the global North and cultural imperialism (Grech, 2009;Katsui, 2012;Soldatic and Grech, 2014); and the lack or absence of poor people in the design and implementation of policies and poverty-reduction strategies (Hickey and Mohan, 2004). But, and yet again, a critique of the rights-based approach and how it interacts with and impacts disability, if it does at all, comes up short in disability and development circles, a critique all too relevant as the CRPD gains ground, at least discursively (see below).…”