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The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities promotes ability equality, but this is not experienced in national laws. Australia, Canada, Ireland, the UK and the US all have one thing in common: regulatory frameworks which treat workers with psychosocial disabilities less favorably than workers with either physical or sensory disabilities. Ableism at Work is a comprehensive and comparative legal, practical and theoretical analysis of workplace inequalities experienced by workers with psychosocial disabilities. Whether it be denying anti-discrimination protection to people with episodic disabilities, addictions or other psychological impairments, failing to make reasonable accommodations/adjustments for workers with psychosocial disabilities, or denying them workers' compensation or occupational health and safety protections, regulatory interventions imbed inequalities. Ableism, sanism and prejudice are expressly stated in laws, reflected in judgments, and perpetuated by workplace practices and this book enables advocates, policy makers and lawmakers to understand the wider context in which systems discriminate workers with psychosocial disabilities.
The problem of ableism against workers with psychosocial disabilities is not confined to a single jurisdiction and permeates across all jurisdictions analysed in this monograph. The stigma, exclusion and devaluing of worth is not caused by rogue workers or invisible social forces, but by lawmakers who turn bills into statutes and by courts who silently apply ableist norms and discriminate against workers because of their impairment type. This monograph highlights an unacceptable truth: to live with ability diversity is to live with adversity.
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