disabilities into society. The implications for policymakers, public and private sector stakeholders, and occupational rehabilitation professionals are presented to help inform future policies, practices, and strategies to improve employment outcomes for people with disabilities.During the past 25 years, people with disabilities have experienced marked improvements in economic, social, and community participation [1]. In part, these advancements are due to improving policy frameworks and laws, occupational and vocational rehabilitation strategies, and corporate practices in support of a more diverse and inclusive workforce. In the United States, for instance, employment rates of people with disabilities continue to rise and presently are experiencing the longest continuous stretch of month over month increases [2].Community participation research similarly documents increasingly positive experiences, resulting from increases in physical accessibility [3] to access to the Internet [4]. Public and private policies aimed at inclusion also have made a difference, such as through governmental implementation of disability antidiscrimination laws [5] and private sector efforts related to inclusive corporate cultures [6]. Occupational rehabilitation professionals' contributions to improving inclusion likewise include advances in on-the-ground and micro-level programs, such as return-to-work and workplace injury-prevention programs [7,8].Despite this positive momentum, research continues to show that such advances have not eliminated the significant disparities in economic and community participation between people with and without disabilities; for example, in the United States, labor force participation rates for people with disabilities still stand at 21% as compared to 69% for people without disabilities [9], and essential avenues to community engagement and civic participation lag [10].Abstract Purpose From an array of disciplinary perspectives, the articles in this special section examine opportunities and challenges in the economic, social, and civic participation of individuals across the spectrum of disabilities. Methods At multiple levels of analysis, the contributors consider employment law and policy frameworks, occupational and vocational rehabilitation strategies, and corporate practices in support of the full and equal inclusion of people with disabilities in society.
Results and ConclusionsThe implications for policymakers, public and private sector stakeholders, and occupational rehabilitation professional are presented to help inform future policies, practices, and strategies to improve employment outcomes for people with disabilities.