View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Ableism.
Ableism
Ableism meaning
Discrimination or prejudice against individuals with physical, intellectual, psychiatric, or other disabilities. | An instance of ableism.
Synonyms of Ableism
Example sentences (19)
Content warning: brief mention of ableism.
Nothing concrete besides speculation and era-dated ableism indicates the two had a poor relationship.
So please, everyone, leave your ego at the door and understand that ableism transcends the good person / bad person binary.
That is where ableism reared its ugly head.
This extends to racial bias and also ableism, said Irene Fubara-Manuel, a lecturer at the University of Sussex.
He believes it helps to genuinely address what disables the OKU community such as an unresponsive and inaccessible system of governance, stigma, misconceptions of disability, and outright ableism.
San Diego, California - May 28: Jenny Palmiotto is a licensed therapist and founder of Love & Autism, a nonprofit working to address ableism.
The ostensibly neutral curriculum still minimizes slavery, colonization, misogyny, ableism, and a litany of injustices that students deserve to know.
The study investigated different forms of ableism, the stigma and discrimination faced by people with disabilities.
When talking about the importance of Disability Pride Month, she brought up the concept of ableism, or prejudice against people with disabilities.
Ableism also manifests in how students with disabilities are treated on campus.
But do we fully understand, and condemn, the effects of systemic ableism?
It requires us to call ableism what is: a form of injustice.
The sheet reads: "Western Wear Night House Rules: We do not tolerate racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, fatphobia or general hatefulness.
What isn’t OK is the ableism I now receive in response to my decision and it has to stop.
What Thorne describes is a culture where commissioners are at best failing to include disabled talent, and at worst are guilty of institutional ableism.
It provides the platform for expression of a shared vision – of a world free from racism, sexism, ableism, ageism, homophobia, fatphobia and hatred,” said Dawn Robertson, CEO of Constitution Hill.
Many people struggle to maintain day-to-day survival within systems that dehumanize them, including colonialism, white supremacy, capitalism, patriarchy, ableism and heteronormativity.
The categories that intersect with disabled difference to create unique experiences of ableism include, but aren’t limited to, race and gender.