Robert Martin (disability rights activist)
Sir Robert George Martin was a New Zealand disability rights activist who promoted the self advocacy movement internationally and was involved in the proceedings resulting in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. He was a member of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities from 2017 until his death.
Early life
Martin was born in Wellington, New Zealand, on 13 August 1957. A difficult birth resulted in a brain injury. As a baby he was sent to Kimberley Mental Deficiency Colony.Apart from brief periods living with his family and a failed attempt at fostering, Martin spent his childhood in institutions as a ward of the state. These institutions included Lake Alice Hospital and Campbell Park School. In his biography, Martin describes inhumane conditions and abuse in these institutions which he would later campaign to close.
Career
In 1972, Martin was released from care and returned to Whanganui. For a short while he lived with his parents but the relationship was characterised by violence and unhappiness. Over several years, Martin lived and worked in the care of IHC New Zealand, an advocacy and care organisation for people with intellectual disabilities in New Zealand. During this period, Martin began educating himself, often through books he stole. He became involved in activities to break down barriers for people with learning disabilities, including protests and non co-operation with carers. He organised a strike of intellectually disabled farm-workers.By the time he was in his mid-twenties, Martin was playing a leading role in the disability rights organisation People First. He held office at regional and national level, and in 1993 travelled to Canada to represent New Zealand at a People First conference. Shortly after this, Martin participated in the writing of The Beliefs, Values, and Principles of Self-Advocacy.
In the mid 1990s, Martin was appointed to the staff of IHC as a travelling advocate in New Zealand. His role was to promote self-advocacy among people with disabilities and to build public understanding that would enable the movement of people with intellectual disabilities from institutions into the community.
Martin also travelled overseas extensively for Inclusion International, promoting self-advocacy. He became a council member of Inclusion International and in 2003 was appointed Inclusion International's representative on the United Nations Ad Hoc Committee "to consider proposals for a comprehensive and integral international convention to promote and protect the rights and dignity of persons with disabilities". For a period, Martin was the only person with a learning disability involved in the UN proceedings, participating particularly in discussions around the status of families and the right of people with disabilities to live in the community.
In 2016, Martin made history as the first person with a learning disability elected onto a United Nations treaty body, when he was elected to the Committee for the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. His first term on the committee ran from 2017 to 2020. Then-New Zealand Disability Rights Commissioner, Paul Gibson, said "Robert Martin hasn't just smashed through a glass ceiling, he's smashed through the ceiling and walls of institutions that locked him away for most of his early years. Every New Zealander can be proud of his incredible achievement today." In November 2020, he was re-elected to the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities for another term.