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| Foto: Phil
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“Diversity”
as a concept has a lexical and political value all its own, with a widespread
appeal. The problem with that is, however, that no one actually has the same
idea of what diversity actually means. There is some consensus that the concept
has, over time, morphed into something that it was not originally intended to
be. Denise Green’s 2004 study looks at the University of Michigan’s response to
a 1997 affirmative action case, and argues that legal precedents such as this
one moved the cursor away from social and racial justice towards a narrower,
simplified idea about diversity.
Walter Benn
Michael’s 2006 book The Trouble with Diversity views it as a conservative
concept that shifts the focus from social and racial inequality to the
diversity of identity, sweeping the important issues under the carpet.
Millennials have been demonstrated to associate the concept more with diversity
of “experiences” and viewpoints instead of with issues of race and gender.
Scott Page’s work has demonstrated that among all diversity metrics, one very
important one – cognitive diversity – is the real game-changer in the
workplace.
This
diversity of definitions illustrates the precise problem with diversity: it
cannot be “all things to all people” without losing some of its earlier focus.
Longer-term struggles for equality and civil rights get diluted in this
eclectic mix, and identity politics cloud the path forward. It seems that
diversity as a concept is so appealing, and so emblematic of our global era,
that it has simply brought “too many cooks into the kitchen”; creating
distractions away from the focus of the pressing social issues we face in
modern democracies.
Desperately seeking diversity
Sociologist
Ellen Berrey’s 2015 study, The Enigma of Diversity, examines how diversity
actually plays out in three different sectors of society – a large publicly
traded company, a mixed neighbourhood in Chicago, and the University of
Michigan. Berrey’s six-year ethnography reveals once more that diversity
clearly means different things to different constituencies. Her more worrying
conclusions demonstrate that the diversity concept is mobilized by different
groups with different interests in a way which has significantly weakened the
demand for racial and social justice.
So diversity
still remains, despite all positive evidence of its value, and the noble
efforts to make it work, more an aspirational ideal than a reality in the
global workplace today. Calls for “diversity 2.0” have focused on gender
equality and diversity of experience, specifically in Silicon Valley, where a
diversity drama has been playing out among tech firms, even inspiring the
popular HBO series Silicon Valley. Adding to the drama, a polemic and
provocative anti-diversity manifesto written by Google engineer James Damore
was leaked last summer.
Finally,
with the explosion of digital content and connected online users, we have
paradoxically come to lack a diversity of viewpoints. When Google introduced
personalised search algorithms in 2009, it translated into the fact that no two
people obtain the same search results, creating an information filter bubble
where we cannot capture the ideas of others as easily. Living in this bubble
prevents us from gaining access the same online information as our family, friends
and close acquaintances. Imagine then what this means when it comes to viewing
the same content as those who are very different from us. By generating
overwhelmingly one-sided content, tailored for our individual preferences,
Google funnels us into social “silos” where we do not have exposure to
diversity of opinions and ideas.
Studies
demonstrate that these silos further entrench our preferences when it comes to
information selection. So whereas we aspire to diversity of opinion and
information, the very tools we use to connect to others prevent us from our
full diversity potential.
Race: a human invention
If
information diversity has been sabotaged by digital media platforms, questions
of social and racial diversity need to get put back on the front burner to
address issues of fairness and justice. Nowhere does the unfinished business of
diversity play out more visibly and dramatically than in the United States,
with its long and violent history of race that, for Princeton historian Nell
Irving Painter, is itself “an idea” based neither on science nor fact,
constructed by humans for human purposes. Painter’s History of White People
traces a long and tortured heritage of “whiteness” dating from Antiquity up to
the present-day America of mass incarceration and the #blacklivesmatter
movement. The implications of race-as-an-invention are startling, because it
means that we are actually perpetuating and giving currency to a flawed,
“imagined” concept in day-to-day life.
We should
actually question the terms we use – instead of race, terms like ethnicity or
skin colour that have observable scientific grounding. This begs a broader
question: do we actually believe that race exists in reality? Do we have to use
the word race? We may question its existence today, but a good many white
European and American male scientists certainly believed it existed in the
past. If we turn our attention to the history of science and its intersection
with “race” throughout the 18th and 20th centuries, we see how ‘race’ as a concept
paved the way for not only slavery and the genocide of native Americans, but
also for Hitler’s racist ideology against the Jews and other minority groups.
Although social Darwinism, scientific racism, and biological determinism have
been thoroughly debunked, we remain the heirs to these defective, racial
supremacist ideas which infiltrate the very ways we talk about diversity.
So while
most people think that diversity is a good idea, it remains, like race, more an
idea than a fact. And it appears to have effectively shifted our attention away
from the festering and indisputable problem of racial inequality. European
countries continue to struggle with racial discrimination due to postcolonial
legacies, as well as the influx of desperate asylum-seekers and migrant
workers. France began to respond to its racial inequity problems in the
1990sand Germany has seen a shift from a class-based to an ethnicity-based
welfare state. Scholars in the UK have focused on popular culture and black
youth and on the problems of blackness in the academic environment. Again, the
United States stands out among advanced economies in terms of its racial
inequities.
These
disparities are manifested everywhere in the US – in the urban space, in the
way people think about their health, and simply in the ways racism is shown to
be deeply embedded in institutions. Drawing attention to this elephant in the
room, Bryan Stevenson’s Equal Justice Initiative has made strides to clarify
those areas of society where the inequities reside and to educate citizens
about their shared history of racial injustice.
Yet this is
nothing new. A report put out by the Brookings Institute in 1998, years before
Obama’s election, envisioned a tenuous future for black-white relations, noting
that even affluent and successful African-Americans expressed a particular rage
at their consistently unequal treatment. Today, thanks to social media
conversations about race and their viral nature, we seem to be experiencing a
crescendo effect in terms of the number reported incidents involving
minorities. These conversations and video evidence continue to pile up,
spanning from everyday discriminatory grievances to fatal shootings by police
and retaliatory actions taken in the aftermath. Polls show that Americans are
more cynical than ever about race relations.
Diversity
and race keep getting confused, amalgamated, or co-opted for different
political gains and purposes. Harvard President Drew Faust published a letter
on June 12th 2018 in support of “Defending Diversity” as the school prepares to
defend the integrity of its diversity policy and admissions process in an
upcoming legal battle. Student body diversity is for Faust the inclusion of
“people of different backgrounds, experiences, and perspectives”, an ideal that
just about anyone would find laudable and worthwhile. And yet this concept of
diversity is, as we have seen, just broad enough for anti-diversity special
interest groups like Students for Fair Admissions to cherry-pick admissions
data and instrumentalize race once more as the culprit behind what they allege
are unfair, biased, and unconstitutional admissions processes.
Diversity 3.0
And yet
there are signs of hope for the future of diversity. Generation Z is said to be
even more inclusive and tolerant than its predecessor, the Millennial
generation. There has been a shift from studying race relations and racism
towards understanding racialization, a process of “ascribing physical and
cultural differences to individuals and groups” which demonstrates a deeper and
broader understanding of society’s unfinished business. Studies show that
minority youth can be extraordinarily resilient in the face of racism, and that
novel forms of therapy can help them cope.
Movements
such as #neveragainMSD show us that young people can rise to their political
calling, organize a grassroots movement, and inspire an entire nation to
pressure government and special-interest groups. Activist groups like Showing
Up for Racial Justice demonstrate that majority groups can take a stand to
speak out forcefully against racism and challenge the permission structures
that make it possible. There remains so much more to be done.

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