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Employer attitudes and the employment of people with disabilities: an exploratory study using the Ambivalence Amplification Theory

Labor force statistics and other evidence have demonstrated that people with disabilities are under-represented in the work place in Canada and abroad. While an assortment of factors likely contributes to this disparity, the attitudes of employers towards hiring people with disabilities are often cited as important contributors to the situation.
Some authorities suggest that employers attitudes towards people with disabilities bias their decision-making and influence employer behavior. This concept of simple discrimination suggests that employers, like others in the general public hold unfavorable stereotypes of people with disabilities that result in discriminatory hiring practices regardless the merit of a candidate with a disability.
An alternative concept, ambivalence amplification, suggests that disability and merit interact in a more complex way. Research on the general publics reactions to disability suggests that when all else is equal, people will rate a person with a disability who is portrayed in a positive manner significantly higher than a comparable peer without a disability, but that the reverse will occur when both are portrayed in a negative fashion. This suggests that under favorable circumstances, employers attitudes towards employees or prospective employees with disabilities may be preferential, but under unfavorable circumstances, their negative attitudes are amplified to become more extremely negative.
Both models suggest that discrimination may be occurring, but provide unique perspectives on how and if it might be occurring during employee recruitment. This study examined both simple discrimination and ambivalence amplification in order to explore their potential for explaining poor employment outcomes for people with disabilities.
Ninety-nine employers rated/scored one of four condition-specific cover letters and resumes (application documents) from a hypothetical applicant either with or without a disability. As well as identifying disability status, these documents also portrayed the applicant as having merit (no errors in documents) or limited merit (multiple errors in documents). Participants were also asked if based on their review of the cover letter and resume, they would be willing to grant the applicant an interview.
Analyses demonstrated that merit, as represented by error-free cover letters and resums predicted employer behavior. There was no evidence main effect for disability status and no interaction between merit and disability status on either employers ratings of application documents or on their willingness to grant an interview, regardless of gender, age, education, and affiliation with a public or private business.
These findings suggest that even when a persons disability is self-reported in an application, neither simple discrimination nor ambivalence amplification influenced employers ratings of merit or decisions based on merit. Merit appears to be their primary focus in initial screening of potential employees. These findings further suggest that disparate employment outcomes of people with disabilities may instead be influenced later in the recruitment process, perhaps when employers come face-to-face with applicants with disabilities during the interview stage. It may be at this point in the hiring process that employers negative attitudes towards people with disabilities result in discrimination. / Special Education

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:AEU.10048/1148
Date06 1900
CreatorsWeinkauf, Tim
ContributorsSobsey, Dick (Educational Psychology), McDonald, Linda (Educational Psychology), Carbonaro, Mike (Educational Psychology), Truscott, Derek (Educational Psychology), Wallace, Janice (Educational Policy Studies), Hughson, Anne (Community Rehabilitation and Disability Studies()
Source SetsLibrary and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format1077838 bytes, application/pdf

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