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Building Trust & Openness: The Human Side of Disability in the Workplace

1:00 pm - 2:00 pm EDT, May 11, 2016   |   Organized by: Northeast ADA Center

Description

Date/Time: Wednesday, May 11, 2016 from 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm EST

Location: Webinar

Description: When many people think of disability in the workplace, they think of the law. This is understandable; there are several important laws prohibiting disability discrimination at work.  Yet, a key issue for both people with disabilities and employers is more on the human side of disability inclusiveness.  How can employers build a climate of trust in their organizations so that people with disabilities are willing to come forward?  Or, how can applicants and employees with disabilities make decisions about when to trust an employer to disclose a disability?  Trust is difficult to define, hard to build and easy to destroy.  During this webinar, we will discuss some basic concepts around trust-building and why it is important.  Then, we will review research on disability, trust and disclosure.  Finally, we will provide practical tips on trust and the disability disclosure decision for both employers and people with disabilities.

Registration

  • Required

  • Cost - Free

  • Please check the event website for updated link to registration

  • For additional information about registration please click here




Hannah Rudstam, Ph.D.

Hannah Rudstam is the Northeast ADA Center's Director of Training. After completing her Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Hannah worked as a program planner and evaluator at the Royal Adult Learning Academy in Stockholm, Sweden. Back in the U.S., she became a Senior Research Scientist at the University of Wisconsin, researching a state-wide health risk prevention program in Wisconsin. After re-locating in the upstate New York area, she took a position as a Senior Organizational Development Consultant at United Technologies and then at Eagle Consultants in Syracuse. In this capacity, she designed tools for hiring, performance management and employee development systems. Also, she developed a turnover prevention program that has been adopted by a number of national and global organizations. In 2005, she took a position as Senior Extension Faculty with the Yang-Tan Institute at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. She has primarily worked for the Northeast ADA Center (formerly known as DBTAC) project and has designed and implemented programs on a broad range of topics related to disability and employment. Most recently, she has focused her work on researching the role of face-to-face leaders in disability inclusive workplaces and on preparing employers for a workforce that includes veterans with disabilities.

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