Forgotten People | IIE
Skip to main content
IIE
  • Scholarships & Programs
  • Services
    • Scholarships and Fellowships
    • Training and Capacity Building
    • Higher Education Internationalization
    • Global Outreach and Recruitment
    • Study Tours and Delegations
    • Evaluations and Impact Studies
    • Research Services
    • US Exchange Visitor Sponsorship
    • English Language Proficiency (TOEFL)
    • IIE’s Sponsors & Partners
  • Research
  • IIE’s Crisis Response
  • Get Involved
    • Giving at IIE
    • Partner with IIE
    • Become a Member
    • Publications
    • Join Our Team
    • Procurement
    • Study Abroad Resources
    • Events & Webinars
Donate
  • About Us
  • ​Contact Us
  • Blog
  • News
  • Careers
IIE Centennial Fellowship
  • Current Fellows
    • Centennial Fellowship Alumni
  • Apply
  • FAQs
  • IIE Centennial Fellows Blog
    • Global Challenges
      • Mutual Understanding: Listening to the Consumers
      • Repairing and Recycling of Digital Electronics during COVID-19
      • Takataka Impacts
      • New Year: Tackling Literacy in Indonesia from 9,000 Miles Away
      • New Year: 2020 Vision of Hope
      • Service Focused Education Inspired Project Buku Buku
      • Beat COVID Together
      • Words into Actions
      • The Books that Kept Us Dreaming
      • Puentes in the Time of COVID
      • New Year: We Have 2020 Vision!
      • Virtual Transition for Project Buku Buku
      • New Year: Electronic Waste Market in Dhaka, Bangladesh
      • Responsible Computing: What I Learned While Working at the Electronic Waste Markets in Bangladesh
      • Insights from the Field: Cultural Sensitivity & Adapting to COVID-19
    • COVID-19 Pandemic
      • Resilience or Immunity: Social Class and The Paradox of COVID-19 in Haiti
      • RHINO, the Magic of Community Health Clubs, and a Community Radio Program
      • Doctors of the World Switzerland in Haiti: Excerpt of an Interview with Irene Cesati, Country General Coordinator
      • Working in Your Business While You Work on Your Business: A Conversation with Tamika Hinton
      • New Year: New Hope for Increasing Public Health Resilience in Haiti
      • New Year: Closing the Opportunity Gap between startups and Venture Capital Funding
      • New Year: On the Hunt for Coronavirus Hosts
    • Improving Welfare & Well-being for Global Communities
      • Reentry Support for College Students Leaving Prison: The Emerson Prison Initiative’s Reentry and College Outside Program
      • From Incarcerated Person to College Graduate: The Emerson Prison Initiative’s First Graduation
      • Advocating For Respectful Maternity Care in Niger
      • The Necessity of Providing Care to People who Inject Drugs in Rwanda
      • Designing and Implementing a Harm Reduction Program for People Who Inject Drugs in Kigali, Rwanda
      • Empowering Rural Communities Through Sustainable Farming in the West Bank
      • Lessons I Learned from My IIE Centennial Fellowship
      • Addressing the Health and Social Challenges of People Who Inject Drugs in Rwanda is a Public Health and Moral Imperative
      • An Upgraded Molino, Increased Water Access, and Transnational Institution-Building
      • Lessons I Learned from My IIE Centennial Fellowship
      • My Childhood and Fulbright Experiences Allowed Me to Be the Researcher I Am Today
      • From Air Pollution to Sustainable Farming
      • Towards Sustainable Farming in Rural Areas of the West Bank
    • Higher Education for Displaced Peoples
      • The Year of the Big Shift
      • A Journey of Discoveries
      • Sustainability, Development, and Hope for the Future
      • Digitizing the Future of Education for Refugees and Displaced People
      • Giving Voice to Displaced People with Disabilities through Higher Education Rights Advocacy
      • Internationally Renowned Professors Meet Ukrainian Law Students Seeking to Rebuild Post-War
      • My Journey: How a Fulbright Graduate Implemented an Educational Project for Displaced Ukrainian Students During Wartime
      • Supporting Ethnic Minorities in Nigeria’s Kaduna State
      • Stereotyping of Displaced and Disabled People
      • My Journey, My Experience, and My Dream
      • Breaking Barriers
      • The Development of Innovative Education Solutions to Meet the Needs of Afghan Refugees in Tajikistan
      • Bridging-Center for Higher Education for Internally Displaced Youths in Kaduna State
      • Higher Education Interrupted by War: Ensuring Continuation for Ukrainian Students
      • Forgotten People
      • The IIE Centennial Fellow from Tajikistan
    • Environmental Sustainability
      • Championing Resilience: St. Ann and St. Mary, Jamaica
      • Addressing Disproportionate Impacts of Extreme Weather Events through Local Community-based Interventions
      • How Can Small-Scale Landholders Access Payments for Conservation?
      • IIE Centennial Fellow Aparajita Sengupta Strengthens Environmental Resilience by Developing Women-Led Local Organic Farms
      • “Ethics are Woven into Each Piece”
      • “I Wanted to Test a Novel Approach”
      • “Mitigating Environmental Crises by Using Small-Scale Local Solutions Rather Than Industrial Agriculture”
      • “Cheap Clothes Come At a Price”
      • “The Delicate Balance Between Human Activities and The Environment is Tipping”
      • “I Know It’s Harmful to Cut Down the Rainforest, But How Will I Survive?”
Two men sitting at table

Forgotten People

By Dev Datta Joshi, IIE Centennial Fellow 2022-2023

I have been advancing disability rights nationally in Nepal and internationally for over 20 years. By advocating inclusion, voting, and rights for persons with disabilities, such as by bringing lawsuits, I am working to empower Nepal’s over 600,000 persons with disabilities, and especially the rights of refugee women with intellectual disabilities.

As the Founder and Executive Director of Equip for Equality Nepal (EEN), I lead a dynamic team responsible for the development, implementation, and replication of innovative projects such as “the Role of Civil Society Organizations and Movements in the Fight against Racism and Discrimination”.

Behind the Curve

Refugee persons with disabilities are among Nepal’s most vulnerable groups. These marginalized people are unable to advocate for themselves and are excluded from the rest of society by a discriminatory justice system. For example, Nepal’s education system refers refugees with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities as ‘of unsound mind’, restricting their right to education as enshrined in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), Article 24.

In Nepal, education policymakers have a poor idea of the meaning of inclusive education for refugees with disabilities. The government is therefore failing to ensure an inclusive high-quality education system for refugees with disabilities, especially refugee women with intellectual disabilities. As a result, in Nepal, illiteracy remains high among refugee women with intellectual disabilities.

In Nepal, refugee girls/women with disabilities, especially Rohingya refugee women with intellectual disabilities face a triple burden.

The Hard Life

Education is the basic tool to make people more aware, in addition to empowering them. Therefore, rights sensitive inclusive higher education for refugees with disabilities can bring significant changes in their lives.  

Life is more difficult for disabled refugees in Nepal where they face extreme challenges to access public services, goods, and transport. Similarly, social stigma against refugee girls and women with disabilities discourages them from attending higher education institutions. Refugee and displaced people with disabilities could potentially attend university but cannot, due to barriers of language, cost, work and family obligations, and missing documentation.

Seeing the Light

Despite the government’s commitment to create inclusive and refugees-friendly higher education institutions, it has not been able to make the higher education institution environment accessible to refugees with disabilities. The practical barriers to inclusive education are mainly associated with limited financial resources, poor understanding of disability, and low prioritization of inclusive higher education. These barriers include a lack of information about the extension of the right to education to include refugee persons with disabilities and inadequate knowledge about existing possibilities and options available; inaccessible university facilities with poor reasonable accommodation; the existence of segregated and inferior quality of education; ineffective social support; high university fees; and stigma against refugees with disabilities and their families.

My Fellowship project, Overcoming the Barriers That Refugee and Internally Displaced People with Disabilities Face in Accessing Higher Education in Nepal, aims to address the challenges that refugees with disabilities, especially refugee women with intellectual disabilities face to ensure their right to higher education. The following components of my Humphrey Fellowship year in the United States were instrumental to win IIE Centennial Fellowship.

When attending the Washington Global Leadership Forum, I had an opportunity to meet with representatives of international organizations such as Refugees International. This meeting provided me with insights and skills on how a developed country like the United States is ensuring college admission of refugee persons with disabilities. I brought that knowledge back to my country and shared it with disability rights advocates, university deans, and the UN Refugee Agency officials.

While pursuing course work on Asylum and Refugee Law at American University’s Washington College of Law, I gained insights and skills on the history and development of the United Nations 1951 Refugee Convention, the 1967 Protocol, and the U.S. Refugee Act of 1980.

During my Community College Residency Program (CCRP) in Chicago, I had an opportunity to meet with experts and thought leaders in disability rights and organizations who helped me identify steps to advance my project and increased my effectiveness as leader in the medium and long term.

My project actively works to increase access, ensure equity, provide pathways, and/or address needs related to higher education attainment for refugee populations by:

  • Identifying the barriers that refugees with disabilities face while exercising their rights to higher education.
  • Increasing knowledge on higher education of refugees with disabilities, their families, Disabled Peoples’ Organizations, service providers, and education policymakers.
  • Influencing policymakers by educating them with specific professional insights and skills on inclusive education in order to develop practices and policies that uphold the right to higher education for refugees with disabilities.
  • Raising awareness on issues related to refugee persons with disabilities’ empowerment through educational rights within the community in general to stimulate social change. 
Sharing my experience on “Ensuring Right to Inclusive Education for Refugee Children with Disabilities in Nepal” with Save the Children senior official in Washington, DC
Dev Datta Joshi met with IIE’s CEO, Allan Goodman, in Washington, DC
Presenting a paper titled “Role of Judiciary on Promoting Refugees with Disabilities’ Right to Education” with CSO representatives in the United States
Dev Datta Joshi giving presentation at American University’s Washington College of Law
Dev Datta Joshi participating on panel discussion on “Promoting Right to Inclusive Higher Education for Refugees with Visual Impairment” with senior staff at College of DuPage in Chicago

A group of students poses after the vegetable garden activity where the students planted local vegetables in pots painted by themselves.

Addressing Disproportionate Impacts of Extreme Weather Events through Local Community-based Interventions

Non-Degree Fellowship Programs

Sustainability, Development, and Hope for the Future


Application Deadline Extended for Global Learning Program
IIE Commemorates the International Day of Persons with Disabilities
TechWomen Launches Inaugural Global Alumnae Summit in Casablanca, Morocco

IIE
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • facebook
  • linkedin
  • youtube

Help share knowledge and create a better future by supporting IIE, a four-star Charity Navigator organization.

Donate
Charity Navigator
GuideStar Gold Transparency Seal

© 2025 Institute of International Education, Inc. All rights reserved. INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION, IIE, THE POWER OF EDUCATION, and OPENING MINDS TO THE WORLD are trademarks or registered trademarks of Institute of International Education, Inc. in the United States and other countries.

  • IIE Websites Terms and Conditions
  • IIE Pay
  • Participant Tax Information
  • IIE Privacy Statement
  • Cookie Policy
Sign up for iie's impact newsletter