Connecting the dots: Navigating DEI at the crossroads
Rukasana Bhaijee
Global Head of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion | DEI Practitioner | Public Speaker | ex Google
Co-created in partnership with? Mercedes Jenkins and Lorena Rosselot
Over the last three years we’ve experienced a multitude of moments reflecting the racial inequities across our globe. As DEI practitioners and leaders we have been called to show up in ways that meet these moments. Yet, we haven’t always met the moment together or had the right answers or toolkits on how to navigate these moments.
It’s not lost on us that many folks within DEI teams are low on resources, have limited bandwidth - so seeking community to exchange info and resources is critical to this work…and yet when that is all the community is, it leaves a gap for collective care. Spaces where we can check in on one another during moments that matter.
As three DEI practitioners working in the EMEA region we recognise the need for collective care in these moments, for each other and also recognise the power of collective action to mitigate the imbalance of power structures at play across the globe right now.?
We invite you to consider the action needed in these moments through tactics to help practitioners do the work, support communities, influence leaders and continue efforts to drive DEI across sectors in our regions.
We are not alone in these challenging, heavy and exhausting times. The murder of George Floyd ignited a global conversation around Black lives and what racial equity means and looks like inside and outside the workplace. These conversations even spread across White and non-Black spaces. However, we must continue to move beyond collective discussion and take collective action. What's happening in Paris, the UK, and the US is not isolated. Anti-Blackness, anti-Arab and anti-Islam sentiment are all interconnected, upheld by the systems we all play a part in. As practitioners and leaders, there are moments, everyday, in which we have an opportunity to chip away at these systems, whether it’s by naming and validating the experiences of those who are most marginalized or actively combating discrimination.?
The recent events across the US, UK and France are continual reminders that racism and inequity have deep roots and impacts.?A few weeks ago,?in the US, Affirmative Action ?was overturned - a decades long policy intended to diversify educational institutions. Adam Lipkin, a journalist for the New Times explains “… American society seems to be at a crossroads on race, coming out of the Black Lives Matter movement and responses to what seem to many to be deep systemic racism in police reactions to encounters with young Black men, and then followed by a pushback against the?1619 Project, ?against critical race theory…”
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In the same week the?UK Royal Air Force ?dealt with cases of positive discrimination in efforts to diversify the air force, which impacted White men’s acceptance rates into the force. While it’s illegal to hire people based on their identity, what is not being said across this issue is the exclusion and barriers that women and folks of colour face to enter these types of spaces. Policies and legislations to protect against racism, sexism and the like are at stake when we blur the lines of?why positive action?policies are in place and critical to addressing historical underrepresentation of talent.?
France, known for its principles of "fraternité, égalité, liberté" (brotherhood, equality, liberty), is currently facing a lack of discourse regarding important social issues within the country. The recent case of Nahel Merzouk, a victim of police brutality in Nanterre, highlights the need to focus on the root cause of such incidents and the specific communities affected.?
These crossroads are important to be aware of as both practitioners and global leaders. What happens outside of the doors or virtual rooms of the workplace impact how we show up at work and will have downstream impacts on?how?we do our work. Also For us as co-authors of this piece, this context is crucial to share as it’s where we are living our lives, where we do our work and where we practice the work of DEI.?
There are dynamics that can play out in the workplace that are important for practitioners and leaders to notice and address:
What are things we should keep in mind? How do we show up collectively??