
Persons with Autistic Spectrum Disorders, as well as other persons with disabilities, have fundamental rights that are enshrined in the International and European legislation. Autism-Europe aims at raising awareness of the various existing instruments. Autism Europe also advocates for the full recognition of their rights at European and national level in order to enhance the enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms by persons with ASD towards a full, participative citizenship.
Thus, human rights violations against them take place daily. The right not to be discriminated against in the enjoyment of human and fundamental rights, as a matter of fact, is also violated when persons whose situations are significantly different fail to be treated differently without reasonable justification. Notwithstanding their diversity and the complexity of their needs, persons with ASD should not be considered nor treated as a population that is not able to achieve goals such as independence, self-determination and dignity, but as human beings with unique, unlimited potential.
The old negative perspective emphasises disability, considers disabled persons as objects of assistance and provides facilities tailored to impairments. Autism-Europe promotes a shift in values away from the traditional, “medical” perspective towards a rights-based “social” model that sees persons with disabilities as active subjects with rights and not passive objects of assistance.
It implies that AE considers that persons with ASD do not face disadvantages because of their impairments but experience discrimination exclusion and life-long dependency in the way society fails to meet their needs, to remove barriers of assumption, stereotype and prejudice and to outlaw unfair treatment in daily lives.
This includes failing to provide persons with ASD the positive actions they need in order to have access to proper services and facilities ensuring early, life-long, effective education, vocational training, habilitation and health programmes. This shortage of proper facilities and services prevent them to have access to work, leisure, sport and cultural activities in the mainstream.









