The saga of struggling diversity in the 21st century: a qualitative study

IF 2.3 Q3 BUSINESS
Akriti Chaubey, Sunaina Kuknor
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Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to examine the barriers that act as a hindrance and are the reason behind the struggles for the successful practice of diversity and inclusion. It also provides suggestions that organisations across the Asian region can adopt to have a conducive work environment to flourish diversity and inclusion.

Design/methodology/approach

Qualitative data were collected from 21 in-depth semi-structured interviews, where the male and female interviewee ratio was 6:4. The interviewees were diversity and inclusion leaders, diversity and inclusion consultants and human resources (HR) experts from Asian countries such as India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, UAE, Singapore, Bangladesh and Nepal. The interviewees belonged to varied industries, including information technology, automobile, manufacturing, engineering, logistics and independent consultants. Every interview recorded was transcribed, and an inductive content analysis technique was used using NVivo. Broad themes and several antecedents were identified which hinder the successful practice of diversity and inclusion.

Findings

There exists a patriarchal mindset in society as the main reason; that is why Asian countries are finding it difficult and are struggling to embrace diversity and inclusion successfully. There is a lack of awareness amongst managers about how inclusive gender diversity impacts the company’s financial status. Reports show that companies that have female board members have better profit margins in comparison to those that do not.

Research limitations/implications

This study was conducted within one industry setting, the service sector; therefore, the findings may not apply to other industries because of the different organisational cultures and HR policies.

Practical implications

This study offers managerial implications that can help the organisation foster and embrace diversity and inclusion by overcoming the barriers.

Social implications

There should be fair and equitable inclusivity of females in the workplace. Female employees should be heard without biases and discrimination and allowed to speak up with equity. Females should not be seen differently during organisational decision-making, participation and empowerment.

Originality/value

To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study is one of the few to explore the challenges faced by Asian region organisations to embrace diversity and inclusion by empirical evidence. The study shows how the Asian region struggles to go beyond gender diversity and move away from patriarchal hegemony, which is the study’s unique contribution.

21 世纪多样性的奋斗传奇:一项定性研究
本文旨在研究阻碍多元化与包容性成功实践的障碍,以及这些障碍背后的原因。设计/方法/途径从 21 个半结构式深度访谈中收集定性数据,受访者的男女比例为 6:4。受访者是来自印度、斯里兰卡、马来西亚、阿联酋、新加坡、孟加拉国和尼泊尔等亚洲国家的多元化与包容性领导者、多元化与包容性顾问和人力资源(HR)专家。受访者来自不同行业,包括信息技术、汽车、制造、工程、物流和独立顾问。每份访谈记录都进行了誊写,并使用 NVivo 进行了归纳式内容分析。研究结果社会上存在的重男轻女思想是主要原因,这也是亚洲国家难以成功实现多元化和包容性的原因。管理者缺乏对包容性别多样性如何影响公司财务状况的认识。报告显示,与没有女性董事会成员的公司相比,有女性董事会成员的公司利润率更高。研究局限/意义本研究在服务业这一行业环境中进行,因此,由于组织文化和人力资源政策不同,研究结果可能不适用于其他行业。社会意义工作场所应公平公正地包容女性。应听取女性员工的意见,不带偏见和歧视,并允许她们公平地畅所欲言。原创性/价值 据作者所知,本研究是为数不多的通过经验证据探讨亚洲地区组织在接受多样性和包容性方面所面临挑战的研究之一。本研究显示了亚洲地区如何努力超越性别多样性,摆脱父权制霸权,这是本研究的独特贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
10.30%
发文量
46
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