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Change is hard. Getting diversity and inclusion right in any organization is a function of change. It’s about overcoming barriers, as well as getting people out of dominant paradigms about diversity such that they link diversity and inclusion to other change initiatives that have worked successfully. It’s about empowering people to see connections and to understand diversity and inclusion as part of the overall livelihood and capability of their organizations. And that means providing models and templates that get results.
Here we present frameworks that draw on the research and expertise of Darden faculty. These practical templates will help empower you as an individual and as a leader and help disperse the work of diversity and inclusion across the entirety of your organization. These are pathways that will help you to normalize diversity and make it part of business as usual — to make change happen by building and deploying a set of inclusive skills into everyday work and everyday development.
As Darden Professor and Senior Associate Dean and Global Chief Diversity Officer Martin N. Davidson says: “When that switch happens, suddenly people who are deskilled and anxious and walking on eggshells around diversity, these people suddenly become solution-oriented. They start becoming innovative and agents of their own learning. And that’s a mindset shift. So it’s about getting to a critical mass of mindset shift among people who understand the business, the organization, the strategy and who can then merge D&I with everything else they do.”
Getting diversity and inclusion right is not an off-the-shelf activity. As a leader you have to do it by investing in people inside and outside that can help you learn how to do that for yourself. Here are things you can do today.
Practical Insights From Darden Professor Toni Irving
Game-Changing Ideas From Darden Professor Martin N. Davidson
The preceding is drawn from the white paper Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and 5 Things You Can Do to Normalize DEI in Your Organization. Please see How to Normalize DEI in Your Organization: Part 2 for more frameworks to normalize DEI in organizations.
Irving has decades of experience across multiple interconnected disciplines, including finance, health care, academia, consulting, government, philanthropy and nonprofit management. At Darden, she teaches, writes and consults on topics ranging from leadership, organizational behavior, nonprofit management, cross-sector partnerships, social impact, corporate responsibility and business ethics.
Prior to joining Darden, Irving launched and led the social impact fund Get In Chicago, which worked with corporations, government, health systems and private philanthropy. The public-private partnership developed data-driven solutions to some of Chicago’s most difficult social and economic problems by investing in, evaluating, and building capacity in nonprofit organizations supporting public systems. Additionally, she was a member of the faculty at the University of Notre Dame, where she conducted research and teaching at the intersection of law, literature and social policy.
The Chicago Council on Global Affairs recently named Irving a nonresident senior fellow, global cities.
B.A., University of Virginia; M.A., University of Kent; Ph.D., New York University
Davidson is an expert on global leadership with an emphasis on how to manage diversity to generate superior performance — an approach he pioneered called Leveraging Difference. He wrote the book on diversity in business, The End of Diversity as We Know It: Why Diversity Efforts Fail and How Leveraging Difference Can Succeed. He’s experienced in helping senior leaders develop the skills they need to thrive in global environments.
Davidson consults with a host of Fortune 500 firms, government agencies and social profit organizations. He has served as chief diversity officer for the Darden School, and as the national chair of the Gender and Diversity in Organizations Division of the Academy of Management. Davidson writes a blog called “In My Opinion,” found at www.leveragingdifference.com.
A.B., Harvard College; Ph.D., Stanford University
How to Normalize DEI in Your Organization: Part 1
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