How is the ‘Problem’ of Employment for Disabled People Represented in New Zealand Government Policy? A Post-structural Discourse Analysis

Disabled people have persistently lower employment than non-disabled, and disability scholarship has analysed the ways in which the social construction of ‘work’ participates in the marginalization of disabled people. Disability-related hiring, workplace practices and labour organisation are often i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joanna Fadyl, Mariya Khoronzhevych
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-07-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251355331
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850061671539671040
author Joanna Fadyl
Mariya Khoronzhevych
author_facet Joanna Fadyl
Mariya Khoronzhevych
author_sort Joanna Fadyl
collection DOAJ
description Disabled people have persistently lower employment than non-disabled, and disability scholarship has analysed the ways in which the social construction of ‘work’ participates in the marginalization of disabled people. Disability-related hiring, workplace practices and labour organisation are often influenced by goverment policy. This article reports on a post-structural discourse analysis of disability employment policies in New Zealand, analysing how these policies represent employment issues for disabled people. Findings show that despite employing language that reflects social understandings of disability, policies reproduce discourses that view disability as a limitation of the body rather than a social construct shaped by environmental factors. Paid employment was constructed as crucial for full participation in society, positioning unemployed disabled people as missing out on full citizenship. The policies construct employers as central to addressing underemployment of disabled people, but overlook ongoing systemic discrimination, focusing on information as a strategy to achieve inclusive employment practices. While these policies emphasise inclusion, they often neglect to challenge the organisation of work itself, positioning disabled people as needing to adapt to pre-existing work structures, without considering broader systemic reforms that go beyond just inclusion of disabled people in work structures that have persistently excluded them.
format Article
id doaj-art-89e94ddb9f8a441ca59b13b0a9165132
institution DOAJ
issn 2158-2440
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series SAGE Open
spelling doaj-art-89e94ddb9f8a441ca59b13b0a91651322025-08-20T02:50:08ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402025-07-011510.1177/21582440251355331How is the ‘Problem’ of Employment for Disabled People Represented in New Zealand Government Policy? A Post-structural Discourse AnalysisJoanna Fadyl0Mariya Khoronzhevych1Auckland University of Technology, New ZealandØstfold University College, Halden, NorwayDisabled people have persistently lower employment than non-disabled, and disability scholarship has analysed the ways in which the social construction of ‘work’ participates in the marginalization of disabled people. Disability-related hiring, workplace practices and labour organisation are often influenced by goverment policy. This article reports on a post-structural discourse analysis of disability employment policies in New Zealand, analysing how these policies represent employment issues for disabled people. Findings show that despite employing language that reflects social understandings of disability, policies reproduce discourses that view disability as a limitation of the body rather than a social construct shaped by environmental factors. Paid employment was constructed as crucial for full participation in society, positioning unemployed disabled people as missing out on full citizenship. The policies construct employers as central to addressing underemployment of disabled people, but overlook ongoing systemic discrimination, focusing on information as a strategy to achieve inclusive employment practices. While these policies emphasise inclusion, they often neglect to challenge the organisation of work itself, positioning disabled people as needing to adapt to pre-existing work structures, without considering broader systemic reforms that go beyond just inclusion of disabled people in work structures that have persistently excluded them.https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251355331
spellingShingle Joanna Fadyl
Mariya Khoronzhevych
How is the ‘Problem’ of Employment for Disabled People Represented in New Zealand Government Policy? A Post-structural Discourse Analysis
SAGE Open
title How is the ‘Problem’ of Employment for Disabled People Represented in New Zealand Government Policy? A Post-structural Discourse Analysis
title_full How is the ‘Problem’ of Employment for Disabled People Represented in New Zealand Government Policy? A Post-structural Discourse Analysis
title_fullStr How is the ‘Problem’ of Employment for Disabled People Represented in New Zealand Government Policy? A Post-structural Discourse Analysis
title_full_unstemmed How is the ‘Problem’ of Employment for Disabled People Represented in New Zealand Government Policy? A Post-structural Discourse Analysis
title_short How is the ‘Problem’ of Employment for Disabled People Represented in New Zealand Government Policy? A Post-structural Discourse Analysis
title_sort how is the problem of employment for disabled people represented in new zealand government policy a post structural discourse analysis
url https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251355331
work_keys_str_mv AT joannafadyl howistheproblemofemploymentfordisabledpeoplerepresentedinnewzealandgovernmentpolicyapoststructuraldiscourseanalysis
AT mariyakhoronzhevych howistheproblemofemploymentfordisabledpeoplerepresentedinnewzealandgovernmentpolicyapoststructuraldiscourseanalysis