Intersectional Stigma for Autistic People at Work: A Compound Adverse Impact Effect on Labor Force Participation and Experiences of Belonging.

Nancy Doyle, Almuth McDowall, Uzma Waseem
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Background: Little research addresses the experiences of autistic people at work, yet employment prospects remain bleak. The extant literature takes a largely remedial perspective and does not focus on harnessing this population's considerable talents. In global organizational practice, several programs purposefully target autistic people for their abilities. However, preliminary evidence suggests that such programs are inadvertently attracting mainly White males, to the exclusion of other demographics. Therefore, stigma surrounding autism at work remains, creating potential compound adverse impacts by marginalizing identities, including gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, and socioeconomic status. We explored the intersection of autism with other marginalizing identities in the context of work. The research focused on labor force participation for autistic people and, for those in employment, perceptions of exclusion and inclusion. We compared the aforementioned variables by gender identity, racial identity, sexuality, socioeconomic background, and geographic origin.

Methods: We undertook a global cross-sectional survey, advertised through various social media platforms and promoted directly to relevant organizations. The survey included a range of validated measures as well as demographic information. We analyzed the data with frequencies, cross tabulations, chi-square tests, and non-parametric, group-wise comparisons.

Results: We found preliminary evidence of reduced rates of employment participation by race and geographic location. Females and non-binary people had lower perceptions of inclusion and belonging at work. The perception of accommodation provision had a strong association with inclusion and belonging; more so than incidental provision of flexibility in environment and scheduling not framed as a specific accommodation.

Conclusions: The findings highlight the relational aspects of accommodation and a more universal inclusion perspective. We urge practitioners and researchers to monitor employment participation and levels of inclusion/exclusion using intersectional demographic identification. We appeal for cross-cultural collaboration with academic institutions outside the anglosphere to improve our knowledge of global programs and their impact.

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工作中自闭症患者的交叉污名:对劳动力参与和归属感体验的复合不利影响。
背景:很少有研究涉及自闭症患者在工作中的经历,但就业前景仍然黯淡。现存的文献大多采取补救的观点,并没有把重点放在利用这个群体的相当大的才能上。在全球组织实践中,有几个项目有目的地针对自闭症患者的能力。然而,初步证据表明,这些项目无意中主要吸引了白人男性,而排除了其他人口统计数据。因此,工作中围绕自闭症的污名仍然存在,通过边缘化身份,包括性别、种族、民族、性取向和社会经济地位,造成潜在的复合不利影响。我们在工作的背景下探索了自闭症与其他边缘化身份的交集。这项研究的重点是自闭症患者的劳动力参与情况,以及就业人群对排斥和包容的看法。我们通过性别认同、种族认同、性向、社会经济背景和地理来源对上述变量进行了比较。方法:我们进行了全球横断面调查,通过各种社交媒体平台进行广告宣传,并直接向相关组织推广。这项调查包括一系列有效的措施以及人口统计信息。我们用频率、交叉表、卡方检验和非参数、群体比较来分析数据。结果:我们发现了种族和地理位置降低就业参与率的初步证据。女性和非二元性别人士在工作中的包容性和归属感较低。对住宿提供的看法与包容和归属感有很强的联系;更重要的是,在环境和日程安排上提供灵活性,而不是作为一种特定的住宿。结论:研究结果强调了住宿的关系方面和更普遍的包容观点。我们敦促从业人员和研究人员使用交叉人口统计识别来监测就业参与和包容/排斥水平。我们呼吁与英语圈以外的学术机构进行跨文化合作,以提高我们对全球项目及其影响的认识。
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