Managing Vocational Work, Achieving and Sustaining Work Performance: Support and Self-management amongst Young Autistic Adults in the Context of Vocational Support Interventions in Sweden

Author:

Bertilsdotter Rosqvist Hanna1,Hultman Lill1,Hallqvist Johan1

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Sciences, Södertörn University , Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Abstract In this article, we explore experiences of support and self-management amongst young autistic adults in the context of vocational support interventions in Sweden. We analyse how young autistic men use different strategies to manage their vocational work and the support they need to maintain, achieve and sustain their work performance. Data consist of eleven interviews with 4 autistic young adult men in different work environments where vocational support interventions are implemented to different degrees. One finding concludes that the interviewees are affected by and try to adapt to neurotypical norms and expectations about working life and adulthood. Although individualised coping strategies can be helpful, it is important for employers and formal support persons to understand and acknowledge that individual emotional and problem-solving coping strategies are demanding and need to be combined with adaptations in the working environment. Another finding concludes how work managers act as gatekeeper in the vocational support system the young autistic men aspire to access and in which they need to manage their work performance. Thus, social workers must provide structured and well-coordinated formal work support by both involving the autistic clients’ employers, work managers and informal networks.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Health (social science)

Reference35 articles.

1. Adaptation or recognition of the autistic subject? Reimagining autistic work life: deconstructing the notion of “real jobs” in the Swedish autistic self-advocacy movement;Bertilsdotter Rosqvist;Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation,2012

2. Knowing what to do: exploring meanings of development and peer support aimed at people with autism;Bertilsdotter Rosqvist;International Journal of Inclusive Education,2019

3. Doing things together: Exploring meanings of different forms of sociality among autistic people in an autistic work space;Bertilsdotter Rosqvist;Alter; European Journal of Disability Research; Journal Europeen de Recherche Sur le Handicap,2019

4. Neurodiversity Studies

5. Autism spectrum disorder and the science of social work: A grand challenge for social work research;Bishop-Fitzpatrick;Social Work in Mental Health,2019

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