Discrimination is as big a part of British culture as it ever was – which is why diversity training is essential for 21st century UK businesses.
Equality
and diversity training, though it
ought to be an anachronism by now, isn’t.
The world we live in is no more enlightened than it was 30 years ago –
harassment, inequality and discrimination exist in all their forms and, as far as
this writer can tell, no lesser spread than they did when women couldn’t be
anything other than secretaries and coloured people were expected to clean
floors.
The
problem is fairly simple: management has
always been entrenched by the values of its predecessors. New levels of management, in general, are
trained by the old – and the old guard their elitism fiercely. Also, of course, management is by its very
nature elitist (and therefore, in a sense, discriminatory): which means that people who are more likely
to discriminate end up being managers.
Sad, but true. Diversity training, attempts to redress
this balance by educating the managing classes (and, indeed, everybody else)
about the ways in which every day workplace behaviour continues the regrettable
tendencies of the 20th century.
As
with all modern training courses, diversity
training is tailored in all sorts of ways to meet the needs of the
businesses buying it. No-one is
suggesting, particularly in these trying economic times, that companies neglect
their business to engage in diversity training – but, given that diversity
training is wholly necessary for a fairer (and, one would imagine, therefore
more productive) workplace, most progressive companies will be of the opinion
that a morning “lost” here to diversity
training will result in hundreds of man-hours gained through a happier
workforce.
Discrimination
rears its ugly head in so many ways that diversity training is almost a must
for everyone, no matter who they work for, or where. The whole concept of discrimination is so
ingrained in British society that most of us don’t even realise we’re doing it
– when we build a restaurant with steps going up to the toilet areas; when we
dismiss an employee of either sex, consciously or otherwise, as unable to do a
certain task; and when we tell or endorse “jokes” that might be perceived as
hurtful by members of another ethic, religious or cultural background.
All
of these behaviours are routine facts of everyday British life – and they all
hurt the productivity of businesses, both by causing rifts between employees
and by making customers feel unwelcome or insulted. Diversity
training can counteract this all-too-prevalent illness – with financial
benefits for every company involved, as well as the more obvious ethical ones.
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Diversity training can counteract this all-too-prevalent illness – with financial benefits for every company involved, as well as the more obvious ethical ones |
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