Rosangela Berman-Bieler

Rosangela Berman-Bieler is the founder and Director of the Inter-American Institute on Disability and Inclusive Development (IIDI), an organization created to promote socio-economic and political empowerment and participation in the Latin American and Caribbean region and in Portuguese-speaking countries in Africa.
Ms. Berman-Bieler is known internationally for her expertise in Latin American disability issues, especially in inclusive development and public policy, media, gender, and human rights issues. In 1988, she received the title of “Brazil Ambassador of Tourism” for her work on accessibility. In 1989, she was named a Lifetime Fellow by Ashoka’s Innovators for the Public. In 2004, she was honored with the Kessler Award from Rehabilitation International. In December 2007, she received the UK International Services Human Rights Award in the category of People with Disabilities.
Founder of the Independent Living Movement in Brazil, Ms. Berman-Bieler is also a founding member and former president of many organizations. During the 1980s and 1990s, she served as the Brazilian representative of Disabled People's International and Rehabilitation International. On several occasions, she served as a consulting expert on disability issues with UN organizations.
Ms. Berman-Bieler has edited and published several newsmagazines and other publications on disability issues. While living in the Washington, DC area from 1996 to 2007, Ms. Berman-Bieler provided consulting services to local and international organizations, including the Inter-American Development Bank, the Organization for American States, and the International Labor Organization. Since 2002, she has worked as a consultant for the World Bank.
In 2007, Ms. Berman-Bieler moved with her family to New York and, in addition to directing IIDI, continues to work as a consultant with the World Bank and other agencies and individuals on disability issues.
Ms. Berman Bieler has a Master’s degree in the social inclusion of people with disabilities. She has been quadriplegic since an automobile accident in 1976 and uses a wheelchair.
The activities undertaken by IIDI are focused on information, training/technical assistance and mobilization of the disability community, relative to international human rights laws on disability and to inclusive approaches to disability within the development sector.
