重新思考包容:理想的少数群体、包容文化和法律职业中的身份资本

Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen
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摘要

本文采用了三个平行项目的初步观察结果,这些项目采用了一系列方法(网络和内容分析、调查、焦点小组和访谈),追踪了在法律职业中驾驭不同类型的身份作为有用资本的经验。身份并不是影响职业导航的第一种非经济资本,但它的独特之处在于,它主要由少数人拥有和使用。除了将身份扩展定位为资本的学术研究之外,本研究还做出了三个相互关联的贡献。首先,它揭示了一种普遍存在的多元化意识,无论结果如何,人们都认为多元化是有用的资本。其次,尽管这些多方法来源在理论上是有用的,但它们揭示了对可见(如种族和感知性别)和不可见(如某些残疾、性别流动性和宗教)身份类别的参与者来说,利用这些资本同时是复杂的。组织的同构多样性姿态形成了一个系统,在这个系统中,作为少数族裔被视为一种优势,但包容性感觉像是一种妥协,要么是因为它要求某些不稳定的描述,要么是因为它让个人不确定自己的价值超出了他们身份的预期表现。因此,尽管新版本的理想职业规范可能会使资本身份增值,但它仍然服务于组织而不是个人。最后,这些数据在方法学上证明了边缘作为分析优势点对评估法律职业研究中的系统性不平等的有用性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rethinking Inclusion: Ideal Minorities, Inclusion Cultures, and Identity Capitals in the Legal Profession
Using preliminary observations from three parallel projects that employ a range of methods (network and content analysis, surveys, focus groups, and interviews), this article traces the experience of navigating different kinds of identity as useful capital within the legal profession. Identity is not the first kind of non-economic capital to influence professional navigation, but it is distinct in that it is owned and deployed primarily by minority actors. Adding to scholarship that has located the extensions for identity as capital, three interrelated contributions follow from this research. First, it reveals the prevalence of a diffuse field of diversity consciousness where, regardless of outcome, there is a sense that diversity is useful capital. Second, despite being notionally useful, these multi-method sources reveal the ways in which navigating such capital is simultaneously complicated for both actors within visible (e.g. race and perceived gender) and invisible (e.g. some disability, genderfluidity, and religion) identity categories. The isomorphic diversity posturing by organizations fosters a system where being a minority is seen as an advantage, but inclusion feels like accommodation either because it demands certain portrayals of precarity or because it leaves individuals unsure of their worth beyond the expected performance of their identity. As a result, even though the new version of the ideal professional norm might valorize identity as capital, it continues to serve organizations rather than individuals. Finally, these data make the methodological case for the usefulness of the periphery as an analytical vantage point to assess systemic inequalities in legal profession research.
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