Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/19658
Title: Constructing positive identities in ableist workplaces: Disabled employees’ discursive practices engaging with the discourse of lower productivity
Authors: JAMMAERS, Eline 
ZANONI, Patrizia 
HARDONK, Stefan 
Issue Date: 2016
Source: HUMAN RELATIONS, 69 (6), p. 1365-1386
Abstract: This article explores how disabled workers engage with the ableist discourse of disability as lower productivity in constructing positive identities in the workplace. Disabled employees inhabit a contradictory discursive position: as disabled individuals, they are discursively constructed for what they are unable to do, whereas as employees they are constituted as human resources and expected to be able to produce and create value. Our discourse analysis of 30 in-depth interviews with disabled employees identifies three types of discursive practices through which they construct positive workplace identities: (1) practices contesting the discourse of lower productivity as commonly defined; (2) practices contesting the discourse of lower productivity by redefining productivity; and (3) practices reaffirming the discourse of lower productivity yet refusing individual responsibility for it. The study advances the disability literature by highlighting how disabled speakers sustain positive workplace identities despite the negative institutionalized expectations of lower productivity both by challenging and reproducing ableism as an organizing principle.
Notes: Jammaers, E (reprint author), Hasselt Univ, Fac Business Econ, SEIN, Martelarenlaan 42, B-3500 Hasselt, Belgium eline.jammaers@uhasselt.be; patrizia.zanoni@uhasselt.be; shardonk@yahoo.com
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/19658
ISSN: 0018-7267
e-ISSN: 1741-282X
DOI: 10.1177/0018726715612901
ISI #: 000377142500006
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Validations: ecoom 2017
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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