Manipulating Disability, Accommodation, And Outcomes: Peer Perceptions Of Accommodation Unfairness
Abstract
The Americans with Disabilities Act requires that some disabilities be accommodated to provide equal opportunity for workers with disabilities. However, if accommodations are seen as unfair, coworkers may refuse to cooperate with the accommodation recipient or may cause other problematic outcomes for that person or the organization, thereby jeopardizing the goals of the ADA. A study was conducted to determine how perceptions of unfairness were related to type of accommodation, disability, and possible task outcomes. The study results indicated that there were perceptions of unfairness when persons with disabilities were accommodated, particularly when the accommodation was viewed as reducing the inputs of the persons receiving it and when the accommodated person subsequently won the task. As expected, the interaction between receiving a useful accommodation and having the accommodated person subsequently win was also significant in producing even greater perceptions of unfairness.