It Is Time to Address Ableism in Academia: A Systematic Review of the Experiences and Impact of Ableism among Faculty and Staff
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy and Data Sources
2.2. Article Selection
2.3. Article Screening
2.4. Data Abstraction
2.5. Synthesis of the Findings
2.6. Quality Appraisal and Risk of Bias within Studies
3. Results
3.1. Study and Participant Characteristics
3.2. Faculty and Staff Experiences of Ableism in Academia
3.2.1. Disclosure
3.2.2. Non-Disclosure
3.2.3. Accommodations
3.2.4. Lack of Accommodations
3.2.5. Process for Obtaining Accommodations
“It’s so many different bits of the university, spread out everywhere, where no one—none of these different factions seem to talk to each other. So, occupational health may talk to HR by sending them the report, but how does that then feed back into your own department? Estates? Parking? Facilities? All these different things”(p. 282).
“There was no recognition that it might be possible to modify my job and/or work environment in ways that would enable me to continue with at least some components of my job; both my colleagues and the insurance carrier assumed you were either able-bodied enough to do your job or you weren’t”[51].
3.2.6. Negative Attitudes, Stigma, Ableism, Exclusion
“I’ve given up. I had fantasies of getting tenure. I used to be much more nervous about revealing (my disability, so I) worked harder and covered it up. I was on the tenure track and once let it slip to a member of my hiring committee that I was struggling with the (side effects of my disability). Because the school was located in a remote area, they had trouble to find decent hires. Her comment in response to my revelation was, ‘oh, you know, we always get the damaged goods.’ That was like a knife stabbing my heart”(p. 11).
3.3. Impact of Ableism in Academia
3.4. Coping and Strategies to Address Ableism
Authors (Country) | Sample Characteristics | Objective | Methodology (Theoretical Perspective) | Findings * |
---|---|---|---|---|
Babyak, 2020 (US) [44] | 1 independent academic scholar in musicology (multiple sclerosis, female) | To describe the experiences of an independent scholar with a disability | Autobiography (intersectionality) |
|
Bassler, 2008 (US) [45] | 39 music academia scholars with invisible disabilities (18 faculty’ 21 students; socio-demographic characteristics not specified) * | To explore the challenges faced by scholars with invisible illness | Surveys and interviews (theory: not used) |
|
Brown and Sheidlower 2019 (US) [37] | 54 academic librarians with disabilities (mobility, psychological, sensory, cognitive, learning; socio-demographic characteristics not specified) | To explore the experiences of academic librarians with a disability | Survey and interviews (theory: not used) |
|
Brown and Ramlackhan, 2021 (UK) [21] | 30 academics with disabilities; socio-demographic characteristics not specified | To understand the experiences of academics with disabilities in higher education | Constructivist practice-based inquiry (critical disability studies) |
|
Burke, 2013 (US) [54] | 1 deaf academic and interpreter (female) | To describe challenges that deaf academic and interpreter experience in academia | Case study (co-constructing communication) |
|
Burns and Green, 2019 (US) [33] | 549 librarian academics (180 tenured/tenure-track) with various types of disabilities (56% had mental illness; socio-demographic characteristics not specified) | To determine if mental illness stigma affects academic librarians and their professional environments | Online survey (theory: not used) |
|
Chouinard, 1996 (Canada) [51] | 1 female with arthritis in academics | To explore issues of equity and accommodation for disabilities in an academic setting | Autobiography (theory: not used) |
|
Dolan, 2021 (US) [17] | 16 professors with invisible disabilities (11 females) | To explore the experiences of academics with invisible disabilities | Online interviews (ableist performativity) | Neoliberalism fosters ableism in higher education Themes included:
|
England, 2016 (US) [22] | 1 professor with bipolar disorder; socio-demographic characteristics not specified | To provide an autobiographical reflection of the experiences of mental illness and disclosure in academia | Autobiography (theory: not used) |
|
Green et al., 2020 (US) [41] | 9 academics with mental health diagnosis (5 females) | To explore how academics with mental health diagnoses navigate their condition in an academic setting | Qualitative online discussion (theory: not used) |
|
Horton and Tucker, 2013 (UK) [16] | 75 geographer academics with a disability (gender not specified for 84% of sample) | To explore how diverse disabilities intersect with academic careers | Survey (spaces of disability) |
|
Inckle, 2018 (UK) [46] | 1 female faculty with a physical disability | To describe the experiences of having a visible disability in academia | Autobiography (theory: not used) |
|
Kattari et al., 2020 (US) [36] | 586 students, staff (n = 10) and faculty (n = 24) with various disabilities; socio-demographic characteristics not specified | To explore how students, staff and faculty experience issues of access and accommodations, discrimination, inclusion and community | Needs assessment survey (theory: not used) |
|
Long and Stabler, 2021 (US) [56] | 81 university members (16% faculty, 8% staff) * various types of disabilities; socio-demographic characteristics not specified | To explore the experiences of people with disabilities; members of a university community | Online survey (institutional model of disability) |
|
Lourens, 2021 (South Africa) [43] | 1 university female lecturer with a visual impairment | To describe experiences of a university lecturer with a visual impairment | Autoethnography (theory: not used) | Impact: negative psychological impact, extra time to use assistive devices, physical exhaustion
|
McDermid, 2009 (Canada) [34] | 18 deaf (11 females, 7 males from 5 American sign language programs; 4 deaf studies programs); 16 hearing instructors (9 females, 7 males) | To explore the challenges of deaf college instructors | Interviews (post-colonial framework) |
|
Merchant et al., 2020 (UK) [12] | 11 university staff, various disabilities (6 females, 5 males) | To explore the experiences of staff with disabilities in UK universities | Interviews (social practice theory; ableism) |
|
Morrison, 2019 (Canada) [42] | 1 female with autism and ADHD in academia | To describe neurodivergence in academic accommodations | Autobiography (neuro queer approach) |
|
O’Brien, 2020 (UK) [47] | 5 deaf academics; socio-demographic characteristics not specified | To explore how deaf academics navigate the physical environments of their workplaces | Walking interviews (Lefebvrian approach) |
|
Oesterheld and Fuente-Alba, 2021 (Chile) [40] | 8 faculty with various disabilities; socio-demographic characteristics not specified | To describe the experiences of university professors with visual disabilities | Interviews (social model of disability/ functional diversity; theory of personal tragedy) |
|
Olsen et al., 2020 (UK) [48] | 4 academics with disabilities (3 females) | To explore the experiences of academics with disabilities in higher education | Autobiographies (theory: not used) |
|
Pionke, 2019 (US) [23] | 1 academic librarian with a hidden disability (post-traumatic stress disorder); socio-demographic characteristics not specified | To describe the experience of being an academic library employee with a disability | Autobiography (theory: not used) |
|
Price et al., 2017 (US) [31] | 267 faculty with mental illness (66% were tenured or tenure-track; 69% female) | To understand how often and to whom faculty with mental illness disclose their disability | Survey (critical disability studies) |
|
Rinaldi, 2013 (Canada) [35] | 1 female researcher with an eating disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder | To consider the implications of reflexivity in disability research | Autobiography (feminist methodologies) |
|
Saltes, 2020 (Canada) [49] | 9 teaching assistants with disabilities, aged 26–38, 6 females, 2 males, 1 non-binary; various disabilities | To understand the teaching experiences of graduate students (teaching assistants) with disabilities | Interviews, visual methods (social model of disability) |
|
Shigaki et al., 2012 (US) [32] | 167 faculty and university staff (68% female; 17% faculty; 83% staff); various types of disability | To identify employee perceptions regarding disability-related workplace issues in higher education | Online survey (minority group model) |
|
Smagorinsky, 2011 (US) [52] | 1 male professor (Asperger’s and anxiety disorder) | To explore issues related to the intersection of mental health and education | Autoethnography (theory: not used) |
|
Stone et al., 2013 (Canada) [39] | 35 Canadian academics with multiple sclerosis (10 males, 25 females); 23 were in tenure-track positions | To explore the experiences seeking accommodations among academics with multiple sclerosis | Interviews (Goffman’s frontstage and backstage) |
|
Titchkosky, 2008 (Canada) [50] | 1 female professor with a physical disability | To describe the experiences of exclusion in a university environment | Narrative case studies (interpretive sociological approach) |
|
Titchkosky, 2010 (Canada) [57] | 1 female professor with a disability | To explore meanings made of disability in the bureaucratic management of university life | Narrative/autobiography (Butler’s “framing the frame”) |
|
Waterfield et al., 2018 (Canada) [38] | 5 female academics with various types of disabilities | To explore the experiences of faculty with disabilities | Qualitative (part of larger study) (poststructuralist theory of neoliberalism; Garland-Thomson’s concepts of fit and misfit) |
|
Williams and Mavin, 2015 (UK) [55] | 8 academics (5 females) with various types of disabilities | To explore the impairment effects of career boundaries of academics with disabilities | Interviews and narrative accounts (career theory) |
|
Woodcock et al., 2007 (Australia) [53] | 3 female academics who are deaf | To describe the experiences of academics who are deaf in mainstream universities | Case study (theory: not used) |
|
4. Discussion
Limitations, Risk of Bias across Studies and Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lindsay, S.; Fuentes, K. It Is Time to Address Ableism in Academia: A Systematic Review of the Experiences and Impact of Ableism among Faculty and Staff. Disabilities 2022, 2, 178-203. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities2020014
Lindsay S, Fuentes K. It Is Time to Address Ableism in Academia: A Systematic Review of the Experiences and Impact of Ableism among Faculty and Staff. Disabilities. 2022; 2(2):178-203. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities2020014
Chicago/Turabian StyleLindsay, Sally, and Kristina Fuentes. 2022. "It Is Time to Address Ableism in Academia: A Systematic Review of the Experiences and Impact of Ableism among Faculty and Staff" Disabilities 2, no. 2: 178-203. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities2020014
APA StyleLindsay, S., & Fuentes, K. (2022). It Is Time to Address Ableism in Academia: A Systematic Review of the Experiences and Impact of Ableism among Faculty and Staff. Disabilities, 2(2), 178-203. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities2020014