Coverage of Allies, Allyship and Disabled People: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Allyship and Allies
“The role of ally was popularized in the civil rights era of the 1960s with white allies in anti-racist activism, male allies in the struggle for women’s rights, and straight allies in LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer) rights advocacy (Brooks & Edwards, 2009). Since the 1960s, additional allies have been identified to support the civil liberties of people with physical disabilities, serious mental illnesses, elderly, youth, transgender individuals, and other groups facing oppression. These movements have often been led by members of disadvantaged groups, with allies from advantaged groups typically positioned to offer support and resources (Iyer & Leach, 2010)”[46] (p. 18)
1.2. Disability Allyship and Allies of Disabled People
“Activist burnout has been defined as when long-term activism-related stressors deteriorate activists’ physical or emotional health or sense of connectedness to their movements, impacting their effectiveness or abilities to remain engaged” and “Making matters worse, burnout begets burnout, as movement work is taken up by fewer people, who begin to burn out, engage less effectively, and take out their hopelessness on fellow activists“[18] (p. 364).
“Activist burnout theory to date has failed to account for how causes of burnout differ for people who are subject to racism, sexism, and other oppressions within movements. It also has failed to account for how the overall grind of these oppressions experienced in the everyday lives of marginalized-identity activists inside and outside their activism inform their susceptibility to burnout”[18] (p. 376).
1.3. EDI/DEI and Allies or Allyship
1.4. Science and Technology Governance, Ethics Fields, and Allies or Allyship
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Theoretical Frameworks and Lenses
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Identification of Research Questions
2.4. Data Sources, Data Collection, and Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Trustworthiness Measures
3. Results
3.1. Quantitative and Qualitative Results
3.1.1. Disabled People and Allies and Allyship: Depth of Coverage
3.1.2. Who Is the Ally?
3.1.3. Topics Identifiable in the Abstracts where Ally Was a Generic Term Used
3.1.4. EDI, Allies or Allyship, and Disabled People
“that lead to inequities in the molecular imaging community and STEM as a whole. In this series coined “Visions” (Antiracism and Allyship in Action), we identify and discuss specific actionable items for improving diversity and representation in molecular imaging and ensuring inclusion of all members of the community, inclusive of race, disability, ethnicity, religion, or LGBTQ+ identity” (full text did not further engage with disabled people).[312] (p. 301)
3.2. Only Quantitative Hits
3.2.1. Science and Technology Governance Terms, Technology-Based Ethics Fields, and Allies or Allyship and Disabled People
3.2.2. Ally Terms in a Phrase with Terms Used to Indicate Systemic Disability Discrimination and Ally Burnout or Ally Stress
4. Discussion
4.1. Extensive Coverage of Allies or Allyship in Relation to Disabled People
4.2. Allies and Allyship and Disabled People: Origins of Allies and Topics of Engagement for Allies
4.3. EDI and Allies or Allyship
“TIPS defines equity as the removal of systemic barriers and biases to enact the practice of fair and equitable treatment so that all individuals have equal access to and can benefit from the programs. To achieve this, institutions must proactively identify and address systemic barriers in their policies and work environments (e.g., racism, ableism, sexism, discrimination). They must embrace diversity, defined as differences in race, colour, place of origin, religion, immigrant and newcomer status, ethnic origin, ability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, and age. Recognizing and valuing diversity and equity must be accompanied by concerted efforts to ensure the inclusion of diverse and underrepresented populations, meaning that individuals must be and feel valued, respected and equally supported” and “The institution must strive to put in place the right conditions for each individual, including those from underrepresented groups—women, racialized minorities, Indigenous Peoples, persons with disabilities and members of LGBTQ2+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, Two-Spirit, plus) communities—to reach their full potential, unimpeded by inequitable practices, including personal and systemic discrimination and racism, imposed by policies, processes and research environments. It is also important to recognize that many individuals have multiple social, economic, racial or sexual identities and often face increased discrimination or systematic barriers based on their intersecting identities”[367].
4.4. Science and Technology Governance Concepts, Technology-Based Ethics Fields, and Allies and Allyship in Relation to Disabled People and beyond
4.5. Limitations
5. Conclusions, Future Research, and Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Strategy | Sources | Search Terms | For Research Question (RQ) |
---|---|---|---|
Strategies to obtain data for downloading | |||
Strategy 1 | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS (“ally” OR “allies” OR “allyship”) AND ABS (“deaf*” OR “autism” OR “ASD” OR “ADHD” OR “neurodiver*” OR “palsy” OR “impair*” OR “disab*”) | RQ 1–4 |
Strategy 2a | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS (“ally” OR “allies” OR “allyship”) AND ABS (“Athena SWAN” OR “NSF ADVANCE” OR “See change with STEMM Equity Achievement” OR “Dimensions: equity, diversity and inclusion” OR “Science in Australia Gender Equity” | RQ 6 |
Strategy 2b | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS (“ally” OR “allies” OR “allyship”) AND ABS (“Diversity, equity and inclusion” OR “Equity, diversity and inclusion” OR “Equality, diversity and inclusion” OR “Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion” OR “Diversity, equality and inclusion” OR “Inclusion, Diversity, Equity and Accessibility” OR “Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging” OR “Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, and Accessibility” OR “Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, and Decolonization” OR “Belonging, Dignity, and Justice” OR “Diversity, Dignity, and Inclusion” OR “Inclusion, Diversity, Equity and Accountability”) | 37 abstracts (duplicates not removed) (not downloaded; moved to strategy 2c that should find these and more (2b not in figure flow chart); RQ6 |
Strategy 2c | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS (“ally” OR “allies” OR “allyship”) AND ABS (equality AND diversity AND inclusion) OR ABS (Equity AND diversity AND inclusion) | RQ6 (EDI terms) |
Strategy 3a | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS (“ally” or “allies” or “allyship”) AND ABS (“Technology governance” OR “Science and technology governance” OR “Anticipatory governance” OR “Democratizing science and technology” OR “Parliamentary technology assessment” OR “Participatory technology assessment“ OR “Responsible innovation” OR “Responsible research and innovation” OR “Technology assessment” OR “Transformative vision assessment” OR “Upstream engagement” OR “AI-ethics” OR “Bioethics” OR “Computer science ethics” OR “Information technology ethics” OR “Nanoethics” OR “Neuroethics” OR “Quantum ethics” OR “Robo-ethics”) AND ABS (“deaf*” OR “autism” OR “ASD” OR “ADHD” OR “neurodiver*” OR “palsy” OR “impair*” OR “disab*”) | 2 (both with bioethics but not about people in bioethics as an ally); given result of strategy 3a, we broadened the search without using the disability terms and did not write up strategy 3a in results (so not used for analysis) |
Strategy 3b | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS (“ally” or “allies” or “allyship”) AND ABS (“Technology governance” OR “Science and technology governance” OR “Anticipatory governance” OR “Democratizing science and technology” OR “Parliamentary technology assessment” OR “Participatory technology assessment“ OR “Responsible innovation” OR “Responsible research and innovation” OR “Technology assessment” OR “Transformative vision assessment” OR “Upstream engagement” OR “AI-ethics” OR “Bioethics” OR “Computer science ethics” OR “Information technology ethics” OR “Nanoethics” OR “Neuroethics” OR “Quantum ethics” OR “Robo-ethics”) | 12 (and we read all 12 to see whether they cover being allies of disabled people (RQ7) |
Strategy 4a | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS or full text “Anti-ableism ally” or “Anti-ableism allies” OR “anti-ableism allyship” OR “Anti ableism ally” or “Anti ableism allies” OR “anti ableism allyship” | RQ5 |
Strategy 4b | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS or full text “Anti-disablism ally” or “Anti-disablism allies” OR “anti-disablism allyship” OR “Anti disablism ally” or “Anti disablism allies” OR “anti disablism allyship” | RQ5 |
Strategy 4c | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS or full text “Anti- disableist ally” or “Anti- disableist allies” OR “anti- disableist allyship” OR “Anti disableist ally” or “Anti disableist allies” OR “anti disableist allyship” OR “Anti- disablist ally” or “Anti- disablist allies” OR “anti- disablist allyship” OR “Anti disablist ally” or “Anti disablist allies” OR “anti disablist allyship” | RQ5 |
Strategy 4d | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS or full text “Anti- ableist ally” or “Anti- ableist allies” OR “anti- ableist allyship” OR “Anti ableist ally” or “Anti ableist allies” OR “anti ableist allyship” OR “Anti- ablist ally” or “Anti- ablist allies” OR “anti- ablist allyship” OR “Anti ablist ally” or “Anti ablist allies” OR “anti ablist allyship” | RQ5 |
Strategy 4e | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS or Full Text “ally burnout” or “allies burnout” or “allyship burnout” | RQ5 |
Strategy 4f | Scopus/EBSCO-HOST/Web of Science | ABS or Full Text “ally stress*” OR “allies stress*” OR “allyship stress*” | RQ5 |
Origin of Allies | Number of Abstracts |
---|---|
Not clear who they were | 86 |
medical-linked people and groups | 31 |
education system-linked people and groups | 15 |
Technology being an ally | 14 |
Family-related | 13 |
Disabled allies | 10 |
Non-disabled allies | 10 |
Art-related allies | 8 |
Staff | 6 |
Allies from other EDI groups | 3 |
Media | 1 |
The IDEAD Law | 1 |
Local government | 1 |
Veterans | 1 |
The public | 1 |
The ones in power | 1 |
coaches |
Years | Number of Abstracts |
---|---|
Before 1990 | 0 |
1990–2000 | 8 |
2001–2005 | 7 |
2006–2010 | 5 |
2011–2015 | 14 |
2016 | 5 |
2017 | 3 |
2018 | 6 |
2019 | 10 |
2020 | 13 |
2021 | 17 |
2022 | 16 |
2023 | 8 |
Topic | Number of Abstracts |
---|---|
Topics related to people covered under the terms learning disability/developmental disability/intellectual disability | 9 |
Disability rights and self-advocacy | 8 |
Medical-related topics | 7 |
Disability studies | 5 |
Education | 5 |
Services | 4 |
Language | 3 |
Academia | 3 |
Children | 2 |
Arts | 2 |
Bioethics | 2 |
Journalism | 1 |
finding employment for autism youth | 1 |
Universal design | 1 |
Housing | 1 |
Museum | 1 |
Emergency management | 1 |
tokenism in community development | 1 |
Social support | 1 |
Gardening | 1 |
service animal at workplace | 1 |
Minecraft and socialite | 1 |
Neuroleptic abuse | 1 |
Parenting | 1 |
Years | Number of Abstracts |
---|---|
Before 1990 | 1 |
1990–2000 | 1 |
2001–2005 | 4 |
2006–2010 | 8 |
2011–2015 | 9 |
2016 | 1 |
2017 | 2 |
2018 | 7 |
2019 | 7 |
2020 | 1 |
2021 | 5 |
2022 | 13 |
2023 | 4 |
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Wolbring, G.; Lillywhite, A. Coverage of Allies, Allyship and Disabled People: A Scoping Review. Societies 2023, 13, 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13110241
Wolbring G, Lillywhite A. Coverage of Allies, Allyship and Disabled People: A Scoping Review. Societies. 2023; 13(11):241. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13110241
Chicago/Turabian StyleWolbring, Gregor, and Aspen Lillywhite. 2023. "Coverage of Allies, Allyship and Disabled People: A Scoping Review" Societies 13, no. 11: 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13110241
APA StyleWolbring, G., & Lillywhite, A. (2023). Coverage of Allies, Allyship and Disabled People: A Scoping Review. Societies, 13(11), 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13110241