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What is the future of work for persons with disabilities?

What is the future of work for persons with disabilities?

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2022-05-25

Posted by: DAVOS AGENDA 2022

Author: World Economic Forum

What does the future of work look like for people with disabilities

As the working landscape shifts to a more flexible, remote, and less traditional one, let us explore what it means for people with disabilities. What does the future of work look like for them and how do we prepare them for what is to come?

What do a quality analyst, digital marketer, service manager, full-stack developer, tech founder, cyber cafe owner, grocery store owner, YouTuber, artist, accessibility tester and caregiver have in common? They all represent mainstream, entrepreneurial, creative and “purple sector” jobs, already being done by individuals with different types of disabilities, including severe and multiple disabilities. They also represent the areas of work unfolding for persons with disability (PwDs) in the future.

What does the future of work look like for people with disabilities

As the working landscape shifts to a more flexible, remote, and less traditional one, let us explore what it means for people with disabilities. What does the future of work look like for them and how do we prepare them for what is to come?

1. Inclususive mainstream jobs

(Example) Laila* is a star performer at one of the most profitable staffing companies and mentored for career growth by none other than the managing director. Her role requires frequent travel to various client sites. Laila is a person with vision impairment.At the height of the 2008 recession, Alok, who is deaf, was hired on contract with other deaf candidates and persons without disabilities. Two years later, many deaf people including Alok were absorbed as full-time employees. The reason was simple: competitiveness. Alok underwent rigorous simulations of different types of jobs and learnt to expect more from himself than the low expectations his family had of him.

Laila or Alok’s growth is possible in organizations that are inclusive and use end-to-end disability inclusion processes to create a level playing field for their employees. These include inclusive job descriptions stating the functional aspects of the role. This enables Laila and Alok to identify barriers and seek solutions to compete with their peers. They also need inclusive assessments without visual or audio elements, trained interviewers, "includable" trainers (a word coined by EnableIndia meaning the knowledge, skills and attitude to maximize value from all kinds of differences, including disability) and managers who provide feedback, encouraging them to grow. The company should also have allocated budgets for procuring assistive solutions or provisions where needed.

2. Creating a level playing field

On the demand side, standards for disability inclusion need to be set for the HR community in collaboration with the social sector organizations that are pioneers in this area.Some of the most inclusive companies who have hired PwDs have faltered when their talent acquisition teams handle disability recruitment as “just another recruitment” without creating a level playing field. Using artificial intelligence, for example, for interviews can be discriminatory to people with disabilities.To hire a person with a disability requires a “selection mindset” rather than an “elimination mindset”. When companies receive thousands of resumes from mainstream sources, they try to eliminate people via eligibility criteria, such as educational qualifications, or negative points towards recruitment. In the case of persons with disability, if the mindset is to eliminate a resume, the disability may seem like a negative point and hence get eliminated. Also, the source is small owing to barriers faced due to lack of accessibility in the ecosystem hence a selection mindset needs to be adopted.

3. Adhering to accessibility standards

Laila’s job was possible because all the software used by her was accessible or made accessible by experts. The procurement process of companies needs to adhere to universal accessibility standards. No software should be acquired until it meets the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG).

4. Setting the right expectations

On the supply side, competition and self-expectation are the foundational aspects for PwDs. It’s important to make skills training and upskilling inclusive for diverse disabilities, especially the skills mentioned in the World Economic Forum’s Future of jobs 2020 report.

5. Building aspirations

It’s important to sow the seeds of ambition from an early age via “early connect” programmes and open-source resources such as this jobs board for PwD. They also need to be aware of gig jobs, the latest market trends and “not so usual” jobs, like reviewing videos on social media. In a country like India where parents have a role to play in their child’s choice of work, we need to raise awareness about certain online jobs which might be perceived by some as frivolous.

6. Make them to be their own guide

One of the lessons we’ve learned in recent years is the need to equip PwDs to be their own placement officers. Despite intense job analysis and job mapping, Rohan’s role had to change after six months. As a person with autism, gaining competitiveness through employability training is not enough; he needs to learn to migrate to the new role or else he would be out of work.

7. Enabling via tech adaptations

Finally, technology and adaptations can help a PwD pick their own choice of work. Geeta is competitive in her Project Coordinator role because she uses features in speech recognition software to quickly navigate the mouse and click on select icons and menus. Her inability to move her hands doesn’t get in the way because technology is used well. Many persons with severe and multiple disabilities are working using specific workplace solutions.

Entrepreneurship and self-employment

The digital economy is unfolding in rural areas across developing countries. According to research we have seen, in India, many villages have more than 2,000 people leading to a surge in demand for grocery stores. Siblings Ganga and Rudra are persons with polio in both legs and sell petrol in their grocery store. In our self-employment training drives across districts of rural Karnataka, we met people like John, a person with polio, who has opened opening cyber cafes to provide services for the digital economy.

View the original article here: Future of Persons with Disabilities.