Authors
Mohammad Ali, Lisa Schur, Peter Blanck
Publication date
2011/6
Journal
Journal of occupational rehabilitation
Volume
21
Pages
199-210
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Introduction Do non-employed people with disabilities want to work, and if so, what types of jobs do they want? Researchers seeking to explain the low employment rate among people with disabilities have focused primarily on skill gaps, employment disincentives from disability income, accommodation mandates, and (to a lesser extent) employer attitudes and unwelcoming corporate cultures. There has been little attention paid to the attitudes of non-employed people with disabilities. Methods This paper uses the 2006 General Social Survey, a representative national survey of US adults that has disability information and a special supplement on worker preferences, to examine the above question. Results We find that, relative to their non-disabled counterparts, non-employed people with disabilities are (a) as likely to want a job but less likely to be actively searching, (b) as likely to have prior job experience …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Ali, L Schur, P Blanck - Journal of occupational rehabilitation, 2011