What systemic ableism looks like
- Payroll systems to enter time online require many steps and are difficult to navigate.
- Fluorescent lighting that cannot be adjusted.
- A person needs to request “special accommodations.”
- They may not know what accommodation to ask for.
- Someone has authority over the person and can refuse what they need.
- Research “about us without us.”
- For example, thinking all autistic people want to cure autism when many people see it as their identity.