Citations:neuroinclusion

English citations of neuroinclusion

Noun: "(neologism) the philosophy and/or practice of systemically accommodating neurodivergent people"

edit
2023 2024
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2023, Sai Aanchal & Lex Harvey-Bryn, "Neurodiversity in the Corporate Ecosystem", Psychologs Magazine, January 2023, page 53:
    Corporates touting neurodiversity as their diversity, equity and inclusion (DE&I) initiatives cannot do without neuroinclusion.
  • 2023, Nancy Doyle & Almuth McDowall, Neurodiversity Coaching: A Psychological Approach to Supporting Neurodivergent Talent and Career Potential, unnumbered page:
    True neuroinclusion is about genuine commitment to making a difference and embracing people for what and who they are.
  • 2023, Ed Thompson, A Hidden Force: Unlocking the Potential of Neurodiversity at Work, unnumbered page:
    An organizational decision to pursue the goal of greater neuroinclusion, like any business initiative, inevitably requires a business case.
  • 2024, Tiffany D. Johnson, "The BRIDGE Framework: How Stigma Research Informs Everyday Practices Toward Neurodiversity and Neuroinclusion in the Workplace", in Neurodiversity and Work (eds. Eric Patton & Alecia M. Santuzzi), page 100:
    In closing, neurodiversity and neuroinclusion in workplaces are gaining increasing attention around the world.
  • 2024, Anastasia Karklina Gabriel, Cultural Intelligence for Marketers: Building an Inclusive Marketing Strategy, page 44:
    Topics like disability and neuroinclusion are typically relegated to the conversation about equity in the workplace; it's not something many brands have touched otherwise.
  • 2024, John Marble, Khushboo Chabria, & Ranga Jayaraman, Neurodiversity For Dummies, page 328:
    This made Chico State a national leader on neurodiversity and elevated the school as a beacon neuroinclusion for individuals and families in the surrounding community.
  • 2024, Ludmila N. Praslova, The Canary Code A Guide to Neurodiversity, Dignity, and Intersectional Belonging at Work, page 188:
    Connecting to the journeys of friends, family members, or colleagues or to our own story can be a powerful motivator to support neuroinclusion and create a caring workplace culture.