TY - JOUR
T1 - No care without justice
T2 - A normative ethical perspective of the employment of people with disabilities in hospitality businesses
AU - Mzembe, Andrew Ngawenja
AU - Filimonau, Viachaslau
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s)
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - People with disabilities (PWDs) face discrimination in the hospitality workplace. The aim of this paper is therefore to frame issues surrounding the employment of PWDs in the hospitality industry in normative ethical terms. To achieve this aim, we conducted twenty-eight semi-structured interviews with owners/managers of hospitality businesses and other relevant stakeholders. Drawing on the ethics of justice and ethics of care, our study found that when organisations demonstrated to their employees and other stakeholders the fairness in the procedures taken to implement PWD inclusion actions, the inclusion actions were significantly supported by coworkers, and the organisations were able to achieve distributive justice and care for PWDs. This study, thus, demonstrated that organisational members were willing to take part in caring actions for employees with disabilities (EWDs) not only when they perceived that inclusion actions for EWDs were procedurally fair, but also when they perceived that the PWDs deserved distributive justice outcomes.
AB - People with disabilities (PWDs) face discrimination in the hospitality workplace. The aim of this paper is therefore to frame issues surrounding the employment of PWDs in the hospitality industry in normative ethical terms. To achieve this aim, we conducted twenty-eight semi-structured interviews with owners/managers of hospitality businesses and other relevant stakeholders. Drawing on the ethics of justice and ethics of care, our study found that when organisations demonstrated to their employees and other stakeholders the fairness in the procedures taken to implement PWD inclusion actions, the inclusion actions were significantly supported by coworkers, and the organisations were able to achieve distributive justice and care for PWDs. This study, thus, demonstrated that organisational members were willing to take part in caring actions for employees with disabilities (EWDs) not only when they perceived that inclusion actions for EWDs were procedurally fair, but also when they perceived that the PWDs deserved distributive justice outcomes.
KW - Disability
KW - Ethics of care
KW - Ethics of justice
KW - Hospitality industry
KW - People living with disabilities
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85189544365&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.tmp.2024.101244
DO - 10.1016/j.tmp.2024.101244
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85189544365
SN - 2211-9736
VL - 51
JO - Tourism Management Perspectives
JF - Tourism Management Perspectives
M1 - 101244
ER -