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Administration & Society
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Predictors of Workplace Accommodations for Employees With Mobility-Related Disabilities

Deborah B. Balser

University of Missouri–St. Louis

Our understanding of reasonable accommodations in the workplace is incomplete. Frequently, research on disability either neglects issues of accommodation or examines the receipt of any accommodation, without specifying type. However, people with disabilities need specific accommodations, not any accommodation. This article uses comprehensive models to test the predictors of four types of accommodations received by employees with mobility-related disabilities. Overall, the results show that different factors predicted receipt of different types of accommodations. Furthermore, factors that facilitate or constrain an employer's capacity to make particular accommodations were more powerful predictors than an individual's need for accommodation or socioeconomic status.

Key Words: reasonable accommodations • disability • Americans with Disabilities Act • cross-sector comparisons

Administration & Society, Vol. 39, No. 5, 656-683 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0095399707303639


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