Since 2020, DEI–diversity, equity, and inclusion–has gained momentum across workplaces, academic halls, and social media platforms. Some of the movement’s leaders–including Ibram X. Kendi, author of How to Be an Antiracist, and Robin DiAngelo, author of White Fragility–have focused on the idea that racism is everywhere, and fundamentally embedded into White culture in particular.
A new study questions whether, when incorporated into DEI trainings, this type of “anti-racist” mindset makes things better or worse. Researchers at Rutger’s Social Perception Lab, along with the Network Contagion Research Institute, a nonprofit that studies the “spread of hostile ideological content,” set up a study to see what, if any impact, writings by Kendi and DiAngelo had on people’s perception of racism.
To keep reading, click here: Study: DEI Training Could Make Racial Tensions Worse
Wow! The Trump affect in full effect.
I work in a very liberal workplace in California, and DEI trainings have swept through repeatedly. As a white man, it’s been uncomfortable. I like to think I treat everyone reasonably for who they are and without bias or stereotypes, but I’m told that white=biased and I just have to accept that I’m a vile racist…due to my race. The “I” stands for inclusion, but all it ever did was make me feel like I didn’t belong. I’ve never said anything about DEI, even in anonymous surveys, because I’m not stupid, though.