“…For example, the results of a study on leadership emergence among people with learning disabilities showed that having a disability negatively impacted both peer perceptions of leadership potential and leadership role occupancy, although no significant differences in leadership effectiveness were indicated in supervisor and peer evaluations (Luria, Kalish, & Weinstein, 2014). Our understanding of leadership by neurodiverse individuals is further limited by an assumption that their influence will be predominantly on similar others (Powers et al, 2002). As such, leadership among people with disabilities has largely been conceptualized as advocacy, role modeling, or other consultative behaviors (Carter, Swedeen, Walter, Moss, & Shin, 2011; Powers et al, 2002).…”