Russia: Adult Prospects Dim for Youth with Disabilities
Russian orphanages where children with disabilities grow up often transfer them to closed state institutions for adults when they reach 18 without their consent. Those who do move into the community often do not receive the support they need to live independently. In research from five cities in Russia in 2018, Human Rights Watch documented 28 cases in which directors of children’s orphanages forced or coerced children with a range of disabilities into adult institutions once they turned 18. When children turn 18, they are legally adults and have the right to live independently and be included in the community.

▶︎
Day in My SOVIET ☭ VILLAGE SCHOOL in Russia

▶︎
South Sudan: People With Disabilities Left out of Humanitarian Assistance

▶︎
Russian women answer what they look for in a man

▶︎
How Many Cast Iron Pans Does it Take to Stop a Bullet?

▶︎
Princess Of Boogie Woogie Delights Everyone

▶︎
Kazakhstan: Education Barriers for Children with Disabilities

▶︎
NERVOUS 12-Year-Old Who Can Sing Without Opening Her Mouth Earns Mel B's GOLDEN BUZZER!

▶︎
Nobody Breaks Celebrities Like Rowan Atkinson

▶︎
How violence and stigma undermine the rights of people with albinism in Malawi

▶︎
School under the Swastika | FILM TREASURES

▶︎
Kanada – Katar Highlights | Gruppe B, FIFA WM 2026 | sportstudio

▶︎
Typical Soviet Apartment Tour (How Russian People REALLY Live)

▶︎
ADHD Child vs. Non-ADHD Child Interview

▶︎
Migrant domestic workers in the Gulf: Trafficking and forced labour

▶︎
My Golden Retriever Heals a Terrified Rescue Kitten in Just 3 Meetings!

▶︎
Keine Regeln oder Verbote: Die Familie ohne Regeln | Galileo | ProSieben

▶︎
🇨🇵 15 Dinge, die in Frankreich gar nicht gut ankommen!

▶︎
10-Minute Match: Brazil vs Germany | 2014 FIFA World Cup Semi-Final

▶︎
Professorin berichtet über Morddrohungen an Uni Marburg

▶︎
