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Erasing Institutional Bias

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Erasing Institutional Bias

How to Create Systemic Change for Organizational Inclusion

Berrett-Koehler,

15 min read
7 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

Follow this compelling framework for individual action to identify bias, find allies and eradicate injustice.


Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Concrete Examples
  • For Beginners
  • Insider's Take

Recommendation

Many biases poison American society and the workplace. They damage the lives, careers and health of countless millions while holding back the strength and potential of the country. In this brief call to action, Tiffany Jana and Ashley Diaz Mejias – social justice warriors themselves – present compelling data and case examples to prove their point. More importantly, they lay out a framework for action that any individual can follow to identify bias, find allies and eradicate injustice. 

Summary

Gender, racial and other biases poison organizations and society at large.

Whether subtle or overt, conscious or unconscious, bias pervades individuals, organizations and institutions. Systemic or institutional bias exists when some groups hold advantage over others within a certain power structure. From slavery and Jim Crow laws to the Electoral College – which was designed to stop average US citizens from choosing the president through popular vote – bias surrounds you and affects everyone. Recently, more people than ever, including the historically privileged, have come together to fight bias. There can be no better time for action.

Combat bias by acknowledging it and doing something about it. This means identifying your own biases, as well as those that exist within your organization and society. Moreover, you must recognize and own your past role in supporting these biases. Ingrained, systemic bias, in particular, doesn’t loosen its grip easily; you can’t remove it alone. Once you identify and expose systemic bias, organize others to help you eliminate...

About the Authors

Tiffany Jana leads an international group of socially responsible organizations that build organizational inclusion worldwide. Ashley Diaz Mejias has spent most of her adult life studying and working on issues surrounding racial bias.


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