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Diversity training

Diversity training is any program designed to facilitate positive intergroup interaction, reduce prejudice and discrimination, and generally teach individuals who are different from others how to work together effectively.[1]

Diversity training is often aimed to meet objectives such as attracting and retaining customers and productive workers; maintaining high employee morale; and/or fostering understanding and harmony between workers.[2]

Despite purported and intended benefits, systematic studies have not shown benefits to forced diversity training and instead show that they can backfire and lead to reductions in diversity and to discrimination complaints being taken less seriously.[3][4][5] As of 2019, more than $8 billion a year is spent on diversity training in the United States.[6]

History Edit

1960s Edit

In the 1960s, the concept of promoting diversity in the workplace was prompted as a result of the societal and legal reforms that followed the civil rights movement. The Civil Rights Act of 1964, enacted by the 88th US Congress, made it illegal for employers with more than 15 workers to discriminate in termination, hiring, promotion, compensation, training, or any other term, condition, or privilege of employment based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Since its enactment, Title VII has been supplemented with legislation that prohibits discrimination on the basis of pregnancy, age, and disability. After the Civil Rights Act came to be, activists protested organizations who refused to hire blacks, planned jobs banks,[clarification needed] and filed charges against employers that discriminated against their employees.[7]

1970s Edit

D.C. reinforced civil rights policies in the early 1970s with the Supreme Court extending the definition of discrimination in 1971, in Griggs v. Duke Power Company; the Court overruled employment practices that ostracized black employees without evidence of intent to discriminate. The civil rights movement helped to recreate its momentum for a new round of movements in the 1970s for the rights of women, the disabled, Latinos, and others.[8] With shifts in societal and legal reforms, Federal agencies took the first step towards modern day diversity training, and by the end of 1971, the Social Security Administration had enrolled over 50,000 employees through racial bias training. Corporations followed suit and, over the next five years, began offering anti-bias training to their employees. By 1976, 60 percent of large companies offered equal-opportunity training.[9]

1980s to Present Edit

In the 1980s, President Ronald Reagan tried to reverse affirmative action regulations put forward by JFK and appointed Clarence Thomas to run the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. As a result, diversity trainers in the U.S. began calling for diversity training arguing that women and minorities would soon be the backbone of the workforce and that companies needed to determine how to include them amongst their ranks. By 2005, 65 percent of large corporations offered their employees some form of diversity training.[9]

Impact Edit

Findings on diversity trainings are mixed. According to Harvard University sociologist Frank Dobbin, there is no evidence to indicate that anti-bias training leads to increases in the number of women or people of color in management positions.[10] A 2009 Annual Review of Psychology study concluded, "We currently do not know whether a wide range of programs and policies tend to work on average," with the authors of the study stating in 2020 that as the quality of studies increases, the effect size of anti-bias training dwindles.[10]

According to a 2006 study in the American Sociological Review, "diversity training and diversity evaluations are least effective at increasing the share of white women, black women, and black men in management."[11] A meta-analysis suggests that diversity training could have a relatively large effect on cognitive-based and skill-based training outcomes.[12] An analysis of data from over 800 firms over 30 years shows that diversity training and grievance procedures backfire and lead to reductions in the diversity of the firms' workforce.[3][4] A 2013 study found that the presence of a diversity program in a workplace made high-status subjects less likely to take discrimination complaints seriously.[5][13]

Alexandra Kalev and Frank Dobbin conducted a comprehensive review of cultural diversity training conducted in 830 midsize to large U.S. workplaces over a thirty one-year period.[14] The results showed that diversity training was followed by a decrease of anywhere from 7.5–10% in the number of women in management. The percentage of black men in top positions fell by 12 percent. Similar effects were shown for Latinos and Asians. The study did not find that all diversity training is ineffective. Mandatory training programs offered to protect against discrimination lawsuits were called into question. Voluntary diversity training participation to advance organization's business goals was associated with increased diversity at the management level; voluntary services resulted in near triple digit increases for black, Hispanic, and Asian men.[15]

A 2021 meta-analysis found a lack of high quality studies on the efficacy of diversity training.[16] The researchers concluded that "while the small number of experimental studies provide encouraging average effects... the effects shrink when the trainings are conducted in real-world workplace settings, when the outcomes are measured at a greater time distance than immediately following the intervention, and, most importantly, when the sample size is large enough to produce reliable results."[16]

In addition to increasing workforce diversity and reducing discrimination, diversity training is often intended to prevent successful discrimination lawsuits: corporate diversity training first became common in the United States after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as a way to protect corporations from lawsuits,[17] and although promoting respect and appealing to minority employees and customers became significant goals of diversity training starting in the late 1980s,[17] an expansion of diversity training in the early 2000s was prompted by a series of high-profile discrimination lawsuits in the financial industry.[15] A 2013 study found that white men were less likely to think a complaint of discrimination by an employee was accurate when they were told that the employer used diversity training, even when they were presented with evidence of discrimination,[13] and several studies of the results of discrimination lawsuits in the United States have found that official diversity structures, including diversity training, have increasingly been accepted by judges as evidence of a lack of discrimination regardless of their effectiveness.[18][19][20] Indeed, according to Nakamura & Edelman's (2019) summary of corporate diversity policies, "[i]n the twenty-first century, diversity commitments and policies are standard and firms that lack such structures look suspect."[20]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Lindsey, Alex; King, Eden; Hebl, Michelle; Levine, Noah (September 2015). "The Impact of Method, Motivation, and Empathy on Diversity Training Effectiveness". Journal of Business and Psychology. 30 (3): 605–617. doi:10.1007/s10869-014-9384-3. S2CID 144447133.
  2. ^ Chavez, Carolyn I.; Weisinger, Judith Y. (Summer 2008). "Beyond diversity training: a social infusion for cultural inclusion". Human Resource Management. 47 (2): 331–350. doi:10.1002/hrm.20215.
  3. ^ a b Dobbin, Frank; Kalev, Alexandra. "Why Diversity Management Backfires (And How Firms Can Make it Work)". ethics.harvard.edu. Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University. Retrieved 2016-10-15.
  4. ^ a b McGregor, Jena (July 1, 2016). "To improve diversity, don't make people go to diversity training. Really". Washington Post. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  5. ^ a b McElroy, Molly (3 April 2013). "Diversity programs give illusion of corporate fairness, study shows". UW Today. University of Washington. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  6. ^ Mehta, Stephanie (2019-11-21). "Despite spending billions, companies can't buy diversity". Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2021-12-04.
  7. ^ Anand, Rohini; Winters, Mary-Frances (2008). "A Retrospective View of Corporate Diversity Training From 1964 to the Present" (PDF). Academy of Management Learning & Education. 7 (3): 356–372. doi:10.5465/amle.2008.34251673. ISSN 1537-260X. (PDF) from the original on 2021-11-29.
  8. ^ Dobbin, Frank (2009-12-31). Inventing Equal Opportunity. Princeton: Princeton University Press. doi:10.1515/9781400830893. ISBN 978-1-4008-3089-3.
  9. ^ a b Dobbin, Frank; Kalev, Alexandra (2018-05-04). "Why Doesn't Diversity Training Work? The Challenge for Industry and Academia". Anthropology Now. 10 (2): 48–55. doi:10.1080/19428200.2018.1493182. ISSN 1942-8200. S2CID 158262607.
  10. ^ a b Bergner, Daniel (2020-07-15). "'White Fragility' Is Everywhere. But Does Antiracism Training Work?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-01-17.
  11. ^ Kalev, Alexandra; Dobbin, Frank; Kelly, Erin (August 2006). "Best practices or best guesses? Assessing the efficacy of corporate affirmative action and diversity policies" (PDF). American Sociological Review. 71 (4): 589–617. doi:10.1177/000312240607100404. S2CID 10327121. (PDF) from the original on 2020-11-11.
  12. ^ Kalinoski, Zachary T.; Steele‐Johnson, Debra; Peyton, Elizabeth J.; Leas, Keith A.; Steinke, Julie; Bowling, Nathan A. (2013). "A meta-analytic evaluation of diversity training outcomes". Journal of Organizational Behavior. 34 (8): 1076–1104. doi:10.1002/job.1839.
  13. ^ a b Kaiser, Cheryl R.; Major, Brenda; Jurcevic, Ines; Dover, Tessa L.; Brady, Laura M.; Shapiro, Jenessa R. (2013). "Presumed fair: Ironic effects of organizational diversity structures" (PDF). Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 104 (3): 504–519. doi:10.1037/a0030838. PMID 23163748. (PDF) from the original on 2022-07-07.
  14. ^ Vedantam, Shankar (2008-01-20). "Most Diversity Training Ineffective, Study Finds". The Washington Post and Times-Herald. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2018-04-29.
  15. ^ a b Dobbins, Frank; Kalev, Alexandra (July 2016). "Why Diversity Programs Fail". Harvard Business Review. from the original on 2016-08-21.
  16. ^ a b Paluck, Elizabeth Levy; Porat, Roni; Clark, Chelsey S.; Green, Donald P. (2021-01-04). "Prejudice Reduction: Progress and Challenges". Annual Review of Psychology. 72 (1): 533–560. doi:10.1146/annurev-psych-071620-030619. ISSN 0066-4308. PMID 32928061. S2CID 221722150.
  17. ^ a b Read, Bridget (2021-05-26). "Doing the Work at Work: What are companies desperate for diversity consultants actually buying?". New York. from the original on 2021-12-17.
  18. ^ Edelman, Lauren B.; Krieger, Linda H.; Eliason, Scott R.; Albiston, Catherine R.; Mellema, Virginia (November 2011). "When Organizations Rule: Judicial Deference to Institutionalized Employment Structures" (PDF). American Journal of Sociology. 117 (117 #3): 888–954. doi:10.1086/661984. S2CID 31192421. from the original on 2021-12-17.
  19. ^ Krieger, Linda Hamilton; Best, Rachel Kahn; Edelman, Lauren B. (2015). "When "Best Practices" Win, Employees Lose: Symbolic Compliance and Judicial Inference in Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Cases". Law & Social Inquiry. 40 (4): 843–879. doi:10.1111/lsi.12116. S2CID 153033615. (PDF) from the original on 2021-12-17.
  20. ^ a b Nakamura, Brent K.; Edelman, Lauren B. (2019). "Bakke at 40: How Diversity Matters in the Employment Context" (PDF). UC Davis Law Review (52): 2627–2679. (PDF) from the original on 2021-12-17.

Further reading Edit

  • Beddoes, Kacey (2017). "Institutional influences that promote studying down in engineering diversity research". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 38 (1): 88–99. doi:10.5250/fronjwomestud.38.1.0088. JSTOR 10.5250/fronjwomestud.38.1.0088. S2CID 151771023.
  • al-Gharbi, Musa (September 16, 2020). "Diversity-Related Training: What Is It Good For?". Heterodox Academy.

diversity, training, examples, perspective, this, article, deal, primarily, with, united, states, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, november, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, . The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Diversity training is any program designed to facilitate positive intergroup interaction reduce prejudice and discrimination and generally teach individuals who are different from others how to work together effectively 1 Diversity training is often aimed to meet objectives such as attracting and retaining customers and productive workers maintaining high employee morale and or fostering understanding and harmony between workers 2 Despite purported and intended benefits systematic studies have not shown benefits to forced diversity training and instead show that they can backfire and lead to reductions in diversity and to discrimination complaints being taken less seriously 3 4 5 As of 2019 more than 8 billion a year is spent on diversity training in the United States 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 1960s 1 2 1970s 1 3 1980s to Present 2 Impact 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingHistory Edit1960s Edit In the 1960s the concept of promoting diversity in the workplace was prompted as a result of the societal and legal reforms that followed the civil rights movement The Civil Rights Act of 1964 enacted by the 88th US Congress made it illegal for employers with more than 15 workers to discriminate in termination hiring promotion compensation training or any other term condition or privilege of employment based on race color religion sex or national origin Since its enactment Title VII has been supplemented with legislation that prohibits discrimination on the basis of pregnancy age and disability After the Civil Rights Act came to be activists protested organizations who refused to hire blacks planned jobs banks clarification needed and filed charges against employers that discriminated against their employees 7 1970s Edit D C reinforced civil rights policies in the early 1970s with the Supreme Court extending the definition of discrimination in 1971 in Griggs v Duke Power Company the Court overruled employment practices that ostracized black employees without evidence of intent to discriminate The civil rights movement helped to recreate its momentum for a new round of movements in the 1970s for the rights of women the disabled Latinos and others 8 With shifts in societal and legal reforms Federal agencies took the first step towards modern day diversity training and by the end of 1971 the Social Security Administration had enrolled over 50 000 employees through racial bias training Corporations followed suit and over the next five years began offering anti bias training to their employees By 1976 60 percent of large companies offered equal opportunity training 9 1980s to Present Edit In the 1980s President Ronald Reagan tried to reverse affirmative action regulations put forward by JFK and appointed Clarence Thomas to run the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission As a result diversity trainers in the U S began calling for diversity training arguing that women and minorities would soon be the backbone of the workforce and that companies needed to determine how to include them amongst their ranks By 2005 65 percent of large corporations offered their employees some form of diversity training 9 Impact EditFindings on diversity trainings are mixed According to Harvard University sociologist Frank Dobbin there is no evidence to indicate that anti bias training leads to increases in the number of women or people of color in management positions 10 A 2009 Annual Review of Psychology study concluded We currently do not know whether a wide range of programs and policies tend to work on average with the authors of the study stating in 2020 that as the quality of studies increases the effect size of anti bias training dwindles 10 According to a 2006 study in the American Sociological Review diversity training and diversity evaluations are least effective at increasing the share of white women black women and black men in management 11 A meta analysis suggests that diversity training could have a relatively large effect on cognitive based and skill based training outcomes 12 An analysis of data from over 800 firms over 30 years shows that diversity training and grievance procedures backfire and lead to reductions in the diversity of the firms workforce 3 4 A 2013 study found that the presence of a diversity program in a workplace made high status subjects less likely to take discrimination complaints seriously 5 13 Alexandra Kalev and Frank Dobbin conducted a comprehensive review of cultural diversity training conducted in 830 midsize to large U S workplaces over a thirty one year period 14 The results showed that diversity training was followed by a decrease of anywhere from 7 5 10 in the number of women in management The percentage of black men in top positions fell by 12 percent Similar effects were shown for Latinos and Asians The study did not find that all diversity training is ineffective Mandatory training programs offered to protect against discrimination lawsuits were called into question Voluntary diversity training participation to advance organization s business goals was associated with increased diversity at the management level voluntary services resulted in near triple digit increases for black Hispanic and Asian men 15 A 2021 meta analysis found a lack of high quality studies on the efficacy of diversity training 16 The researchers concluded that while the small number of experimental studies provide encouraging average effects the effects shrink when the trainings are conducted in real world workplace settings when the outcomes are measured at a greater time distance than immediately following the intervention and most importantly when the sample size is large enough to produce reliable results 16 In addition to increasing workforce diversity and reducing discrimination diversity training is often intended to prevent successful discrimination lawsuits corporate diversity training first became common in the United States after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as a way to protect corporations from lawsuits 17 and although promoting respect and appealing to minority employees and customers became significant goals of diversity training starting in the late 1980s 17 an expansion of diversity training in the early 2000s was prompted by a series of high profile discrimination lawsuits in the financial industry 15 A 2013 study found that white men were less likely to think a complaint of discrimination by an employee was accurate when they were told that the employer used diversity training even when they were presented with evidence of discrimination 13 and several studies of the results of discrimination lawsuits in the United States have found that official diversity structures including diversity training have increasingly been accepted by judges as evidence of a lack of discrimination regardless of their effectiveness 18 19 20 Indeed according to Nakamura amp Edelman s 2019 summary of corporate diversity policies i n the twenty first century diversity commitments and policies are standard and firms that lack such structures look suspect 20 See also EditAnti bias curriculum Diversity business Diversity politics Diversity equity and inclusion Multiculturalism Neurodiversity Sensitivity trainingReferences Edit Lindsey Alex King Eden Hebl Michelle Levine Noah September 2015 The Impact of Method Motivation and Empathy on Diversity Training Effectiveness Journal of Business and Psychology 30 3 605 617 doi 10 1007 s10869 014 9384 3 S2CID 144447133 Chavez Carolyn I Weisinger Judith Y Summer 2008 Beyond diversity training a social infusion for cultural inclusion Human Resource Management 47 2 331 350 doi 10 1002 hrm 20215 a b Dobbin Frank Kalev Alexandra Why Diversity Management Backfires And How Firms Can Make it Work ethics harvard edu Edmond J Safra Center for Ethics Harvard University Retrieved 2016 10 15 a b McGregor Jena July 1 2016 To improve diversity don t make people go to diversity training Really Washington Post Retrieved 15 October 2016 a b McElroy Molly 3 April 2013 Diversity programs give illusion of corporate fairness study shows UW Today University of Washington Retrieved 15 October 2016 Mehta Stephanie 2019 11 21 Despite spending billions companies can t buy diversity Washington Post Archived from the original on 2021 12 04 Anand Rohini Winters Mary Frances 2008 A Retrospective View of Corporate Diversity Training From 1964 to the Present PDF Academy of Management Learning amp Education 7 3 356 372 doi 10 5465 amle 2008 34251673 ISSN 1537 260X Archived PDF from the original on 2021 11 29 Dobbin Frank 2009 12 31 Inventing Equal Opportunity Princeton Princeton University Press doi 10 1515 9781400830893 ISBN 978 1 4008 3089 3 a b Dobbin Frank Kalev Alexandra 2018 05 04 Why Doesn t Diversity Training Work The Challenge for Industry and Academia Anthropology Now 10 2 48 55 doi 10 1080 19428200 2018 1493182 ISSN 1942 8200 S2CID 158262607 a b Bergner Daniel 2020 07 15 White Fragility Is Everywhere But Does Antiracism Training Work The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 01 17 Kalev Alexandra Dobbin Frank Kelly Erin August 2006 Best practices or best guesses Assessing the efficacy of corporate affirmative action and diversity policies PDF American Sociological Review 71 4 589 617 doi 10 1177 000312240607100404 S2CID 10327121 Archived PDF from the original on 2020 11 11 Kalinoski Zachary T Steele Johnson Debra Peyton Elizabeth J Leas Keith A Steinke Julie Bowling Nathan A 2013 A meta analytic evaluation of diversity training outcomes Journal of Organizational Behavior 34 8 1076 1104 doi 10 1002 job 1839 a b Kaiser Cheryl R Major Brenda Jurcevic Ines Dover Tessa L Brady Laura M Shapiro Jenessa R 2013 Presumed fair Ironic effects of organizational diversity structures PDF Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 104 3 504 519 doi 10 1037 a0030838 PMID 23163748 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 07 07 Vedantam Shankar 2008 01 20 Most Diversity Training Ineffective Study Finds The Washington Post and Times Herald ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2018 04 29 a b Dobbins Frank Kalev Alexandra July 2016 Why Diversity Programs Fail Harvard Business Review Archived from the original on 2016 08 21 a b Paluck Elizabeth Levy Porat Roni Clark Chelsey S Green Donald P 2021 01 04 Prejudice Reduction Progress and Challenges Annual Review of Psychology 72 1 533 560 doi 10 1146 annurev psych 071620 030619 ISSN 0066 4308 PMID 32928061 S2CID 221722150 a b Read Bridget 2021 05 26 Doing the Work at Work What are companies desperate for diversity consultants actually buying New York Archived from the original on 2021 12 17 Edelman Lauren B Krieger Linda H Eliason Scott R Albiston Catherine R Mellema Virginia November 2011 When Organizations Rule Judicial Deference to Institutionalized Employment Structures PDF American Journal of Sociology 117 117 3 888 954 doi 10 1086 661984 S2CID 31192421 Archived from the original on 2021 12 17 Krieger Linda Hamilton Best Rachel Kahn Edelman Lauren B 2015 When Best Practices Win Employees Lose Symbolic Compliance and Judicial Inference in Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Cases Law amp Social Inquiry 40 4 843 879 doi 10 1111 lsi 12116 S2CID 153033615 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 12 17 a b Nakamura Brent K Edelman Lauren B 2019 Bakke at 40 How Diversity Matters in the Employment Context PDF UC Davis Law Review 52 2627 2679 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 12 17 Further reading EditBeddoes Kacey 2017 Institutional influences that promote studying down in engineering diversity research Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies 38 1 88 99 doi 10 5250 fronjwomestud 38 1 0088 JSTOR 10 5250 fronjwomestud 38 1 0088 S2CID 151771023 al Gharbi Musa September 16 2020 Diversity Related Training What Is It Good For Heterodox Academy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diversity training amp oldid 1170357703, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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