Autism and Race
Autism and Race: Why Racialized Autistic People Are Missed, Misdiagnosed, and Harmed
Autism does not exist outside of social systems. For racialized people, autism is experienced through racism, surveillance, and unequal access to care. This article explains why racialized autistic people are more likely to be missed, misdiagnosed, or punishedâand why an intersectional approach is essential.
Autism Is Not Diagnosed Equally
Start with the evidence: prevalence is stable, but diagnosis is not.1
Autism prevalence does not differ meaningfully by race. Diagnosis does.
Racialized childrenâespecially Black childrenâare:
- Diagnosed later
- Less likely to receive autism diagnoses
- More likely to receive behavioural or conduct-based diagnoses
- More likely to be disciplined rather than supported
These differences reflect systemic bias, not differences in behaviour.
Behaviour Is Interpreted Through Race
Racism shapes how the same traits are perceived and labeled.1
Identical behaviours are read differently depending on race:
- Emotional dysregulation may be labeled âdistressâ in white children
- The same behaviour may be labeled âdefianceâ or âaggressionâ in Black children
This racialized interpretation transforms neurodivergence into misconduct.
Adultification and Loss of Protection
When childhood is denied, support turns into punishment.1
Black children are frequently perceived as older and less innocent. When childhood itself is denied:
- Developmental differences are punished
- Support is withheld
- Neurodivergence is criminalized
Autistic traits become safety risks rather than support needs.
The Cost of Masking for Safety
Survival often requires a level of masking that takes a heavy toll.1
Racialized autistic people often mask not just to fit inâbut to stay safe.
This leads to:
- Hyper-vigilance
- Chronic stress
- Burnout
- Delayed or missed diagnosis
- Increased mental health risk
Masking becomes survival, not adaptation.
Neurodiversity Without Anti-Racism Is Incomplete
Without an anti-racist lens, neurodiversity remains selective.1
Mainstream neurodiversity narratives have often centered white autistic experiences.
Without anti-racist frameworks:
- Some autistic people are protected by âquirky geniusâ narratives
- Racialized autistic people remain surveilled and punished
- Neurodivergence is unevenly humanized
Autism must be understood intersectionally, or inequity persists.
What an Anti-Racist Autism Framework Requires
Equity requires structural change, not just awareness.1
- Equitable diagnostic access
- Culturally informed assessment
- Rejection of behavioural moralism
- Reduction of surveillance-based discipline
- Centering racialized autistic voices
- Support over punishment at every level
Key Takeaway
Autism does not look different in racialized people.
Systems respond differently to it.
Until racism is addressed alongside ableism, racialized autistic people will continue to be overlooked, misdiagnosed, and harmed.
Source
âŹââŹă( Âș _ Âșă)