Abstract :
Disability theory and disabled people’s voices have remained marginal in attempts to
include a wider range of theoretical perspectives and voices in organization studies.
This includes studies of the normative assumptions underpinning socially constructed
categories of difference. This paper addresses this gap by reviewing the literature on
social categories of difference, intersectional studies and studies across human resource
management and diversity literatures. The argument here is that, while research has
begun to move from an individualized discourse of disability, disability remains inadequately
theorized as a constructed difference. The paper reviews the disability studies
literature to identify the relevance of conceptualizing disability for work organizations,
problematizes the concepts of disability and impairment and differentiates competing
discourses of disability. The contribution of this paper is threefold. First, it offers an
alternative social interpretation discourse which argues that disability is constructed as
a negated difference through assumed ableism, which is a normative expectation of
non-disability. Second, it presents impairment effects as legitimate organizing requirements
rather than individualized problems. The paper argues impairment effects, the
effects of bodily and cognitive variation, have legitimate implications for how disabled
people negotiate organizing contexts. Third, it develops a disability studies lens to
advance theoretical approaches to the study of social categories of difference in the field
of management and organization studies.