Abstract
The article is a review by a policing practitioner of the impact that the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has had on government policy, together with the vulnerability to crime for the disabled population in Aus-tralia. It identifies the strategic implications that may arise for policing administrators in the Australian and, possibly, the universal policing context, posed by the adoption and ratification of this Convention. It argues that victim-centred policing philosophy may be required to meet the significant challenges for policing in the area of disabilities.
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