白人DEI专业人士对他们促进工作场所多样性、公平和包容性的贡献的看法:利用和去中心化白人

R. Evan, Stephanie Sisco, Crystal Saric Fashant, Neela L. Nandyal, S. Robbins
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摘要

目的本研究运用社会认同理论(SIT)来研究白人多样性、公平和包容(DEI)专业人士如何看待他们在促进工作场所DEI方面的角色和贡献。设计/方法/方法采用解释性现象学分析(IPA)来构建和指导研究,并从16位白人DEI专业人员的访谈中收集数据。研究结果以SIT的社会分类概念为框架,将研究结果分为群体内认同和群体外认同两部分。参与者的群体内身份证明了参与者如何利用自己的白人身份赋予参与者执行DEI工作的影响力和代理权。参与者的外群体身份揭示了参与者如何试图去中心化参与者的白人身份,并解开与参与者的白人身份和DEI贡献相关的不安全感。这些发现都与特定的角色有关:领导者、受益者、盟友和探路者。实际意义本研究的实际意义是批判性地考察白人DEI员工的生活经历,以发展对白人的理解,同时让白人对工作场所的DEI努力负责。原创性/价值需要更深入、更诚实的对话来探索白人DEI专业人员如何制定和感知白人DEI专业人员的DEI贡献。因此,本文将进一步讨论有关白人个体从事组织层面DEI工作的文献。
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White DEI professionals' perception of their contribution to advancing workplace diversity, equity and inclusion: leveraging and decentering whiteness
PurposeThis research applies social identity theory (SIT) to examine how White diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) professionals perceive their role and contributions to advancing workplace DEI.Design/methodology/approachInterpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) was used to structure and guide the study, and data were collected from interviews with 16 White DEI professionals.FindingsThe SIT concept of social categorization was selected as a framework to discuss the findings, which were divided into two sections: in-group identity and out-group identity. The participants' in-group identities demonstrated how the participants leveraged the participants' Whiteness to grant the participants the influence and agency to perform DEI work. The participant's out-group identities revealed how the participants attempted to decenter the participants' Whiteness and unpack insecurities related to the participants' White identity and DEI contributions. Each of these findings has been associated with a specific role: leader, beneficiary, ally and pathfinder.Practical implicationsThe practical implications of this study are critically examining White DEI employees' lived experience to develop an understanding of Whiteness while holding White people accountable for DEI efforts within workplaces.Originality/valueDeeper and more honest conversations are needed to explore the phenomenon of how White DEI professionals enact and perceive the DEI contributions of the White DEI professionals. Therefore, this paper will provide further discussion on literature concerning White individuals engaged in organizational-level DEI work.
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