Birth Date: | 1993 |
Birth Place: | Mexico City |
Occupation: | Advocate, activist |
Awards: | 100 Women (2022) |
María Fernanda Castro Maya (Mexico City, 1993) is a Mexican self-advocate disability rights activist.
Due to her intellectual disability, she became part of the Confederación Mexicana de Organizaciones en Favor de la Persona con Discapacidad Intellectual, an organization that works to guarantee the rights of disable people, with the support of Human Rights Watch.[1] [2] For example, it requested all Mexican political parties to take in consideration intellectual disabilities and learning difficulties in the measures that they endorse.[3] She advocates for linguistic accessibility regarding documents linked to political decisions, as well as for inclusion of disabled people in political parties and electoral acts.[4]
She was part of the Mexican delegation that presented a report to the United Nations about disability rights, and since 2020 she is the regional representative of Empower Us, a group pertaining to the global network .[5] Castro also organized the online consultation about political participation of people with intellectual or psychosocial disabilities, and moderated a panel discussion at the Inclusion International World Congress.[6]
She even made a proposal to the 2022 Parliament of People with Disabilities to make an amendment in the Mexico City Civil Code in order to abolish the requirement that disabled adults still have a legal guardian. The proposal was sent to the and still hasn't been answered.[7]
In 2022, she was included in the BBC 100 Women list for upholding disability rights in Mexico and fighting for their political participation.[8]