Bridging Neurodiversity and Open Scholarship: How Shared Values Can Guide Best Practices for Research Integrity, Social Justice, and Principled Education

Publication date

2025-12

Authors

FORRT
Phan, Jenny Mai
Middleton, Sara L.
Azevedo, FlavioORCID 0000-0001-9000-8513ISNI 0000000517693349
Iley, Bethan J.
Grose-Hodge, Magdalena
Tyler, Samantha L.
Kapp, Steven K.
Yeung, Siu Kit
Shaw, John J.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Not all people conform to socially constructed norms, nor should they have to. Neurodiversity, the natural variation in human brains and cognition, is fundamental to understanding human behavior, yet neurodivergent individuals in academia are often stigmatized, undervalued, or pressured to mask their differences. This position statement, authored predominantly by neurodivergent scholars, explores how aligning the values of the neurodiversity movement with practices of Open Scholarship (OSch) can foster greater research integrity, rigor, social responsibility and justice, diversity, equity, inclusivity, and accessibility in academia. We review systemic barriers faced by neurodivergent researchers—from disclosure dilemmas and hidden curriculum expectations to intersectional disadvantages—and identify how OSch principles (transparency, accessibility, collaboration) can help mitigate these challenges. Drawing on lived experiences and current research, we propose concrete reforms, including adopting universal design in scholarly communication, promoting participatory research methods, and enacting supportive policies (e.g., flexible work arrangements, inclusive codes of conduct). By leveraging shared values of openness and neuro-inclusion, academia can become more just and epistemically equitable. Our recommendations chart a path toward an academic culture where neurodivergent scholars can thrive openly, to the benefit of scientific rigor and social justice alike.

Keywords

inclusive academia, intersectionality, neurodiversity, Open Scholarship, participatory research, research integrity, social justice, Universal Design for Learning, General Social Sciences, SDG 4 - Quality Education, SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities, SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Citation

FORRT, Phan, J M, Middleton, S L, Azevedo, F, Iley, B J, Grose-Hodge, M, Tyler, S L, Kapp, S K, Yeung, S K, Shaw, J J & Hartmann, H 2025, 'Bridging Neurodiversity and Open Scholarship : How Shared Values Can Guide Best Practices for Research Integrity, Social Justice, and Principled Education', Journal of Social Issues, vol. 81, no. 4, e70035. https://doi.org/10.1111/josi.70035