I am looking back at different individual events across my career. At times I still feel that the workplace is one giant systematic nepotistic pile. I would now categorise a lot of these negative experiences as disability injustice in one form or another.
Someone highlighted what I might be experiencing might actually be related to thin slice judgements being made, because of my autism. Certainly some of this applies, but the definitions of disability injustice seem to fall exactly in line with how I viewed those situations.
I just wondered whether anyone else had experienced something similar?
The definitions for anyone who may not be aware:
- Employment Barriers: Being overlooked for jobs, fired due to absences, or denied adjustments to perform tasks.
- Systemic Discrimination: Inaccessible public services, transport, and environments that exclude disabled people.
- Forms of Injustice:
- Direct: Treating a person less favorably because of their impairment.
- Indirect: Rules or policies that disadvantage disabled people.
- Harassment/Victimisation: Intimidation or unfair treatment for complaining about discrimination.
- Legal Protections (UK): The Equality Act 2010 protects against these, and organizations like Inclusion London and Disability Rights UK work to fight for rights.
- Intersectionality: Discrimination often intersects with factors like sex, race, age, or sexual orientation.
- Basis: They rely on nonverbal cues like clothing, body language, posture, and facial expressions.
- Accuracy: Research by Ambady and Rosenthal (1992) suggests these brief snapshots can be surprisingly accurate in predicting interpersonal consequences, such as teacher effectiveness or salesperson competence
.
- Clinical/Social Utility: These judgments are used to gauge personality traits, emotional states (anxiety, depression), and social characteristics.
- Bias and Limitations: While sometimes accurate, thin slices can lead to negative, long-lasting, and unfair stereotypes, particularly against autistic individuals, who may be judged harshly within seconds of a first impression.
- Autism: Neurotypical observers often form negative, instantaneous, and inaccurate perceptions of autistic individuals, leading to social devaluation and decreased willingness to interact.
- Clinical Settings: Clinicians can accurately identify personality disorders or patient emotions from very brief video clips.
- Social Life: People quickly assess trustworthiness, social status, and competence in strangers.