最佳实践还是流行语?创意技术领域电子数据交换导师制的机遇与挑战

Alison Harvey, Tamara Shepherd, Dani Rudnicka-Lavoie, Emily Mohabir
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摘要

本文探讨了师徒关系作为一种备受赞誉的战略,在一系列排他性的工作部门中提高公平性、多样性和包容性(EDI)。作为在历史上同质化的行业中解决代表性不足和脚手架进入、发展和成功的策略,指导被视为一种规范有益的实践。然而,尽管它与更多的机会和打破障碍的潜力有关,但指导很少被定义,并且如何实施通常不在讨论中。我们的研究项目解决了这种关于指导对EDI目标和价值观影响的模糊性,特别关注创造性和技术行业,在这些行业中,排斥参与仍然是有害的。利用批判性女权主义对这些部门中关于师徒关系的公开材料的分析,以及对40位师徒关系项目组织者和从事师徒关系的创意技术工作者的采访,我们从EDI中的三个关键利益相关者的角度概述了师徒活动的特征——企业单位,如员工资源小组,向组织和个人提供师徒服务的第三方公司,社区团体将指导作为其活动的一部分。我们对这三种不同的指导模式的探索表明,组织这些活动的背景决定了它们的实施、评估和整体潜在影响,包括交叉女权主义目标。最后,我们论证了以社区为基础的指导方法的价值,以实现与公平、多样性和包容性相关的更具变革性的成果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Best Practice or Buzzword? the Opportunities and Challenges of Mentorship for EDI in Creative Technology

This paper explores mentorship as a much-celebrated strategy for improving equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) across a range of exclusionary working sectors. As a tactic for addressing underrepresentation and scaffolding entry, progression, and success within historically homogenous industries, mentorship is seen as a normatively beneficial practice. Yet, despite its association with greater opportunities and potential for breaking barriers, mentorship is rarely defined and how it is enacted is typically absent from discussion. Our research project tackles this ambiguity on the impact of mentorship for EDI aims and values, with a specific focus on creative and technological industries where exclusions in participation remain pernicious. Drawing on critical feminist analysis of public-facing materials about mentorship in these sectors and 40 interviews with mentorship program organizers and creative tech workers who have engaged in mentorship relationships, we outline the characteristics of mentorship activities from the perspective of three key stakeholders in EDI- corporate units such as employee resource groups, third-party companies who provide mentorship services to organizations and individuals, and community groups featuring mentorship as part of their activities. Our exploration of these three distinct models of mentorship demonstrates that the context where these activities are organized shapes their implementation, evaluation, and overall potential impacts, including for intersectional feminist aims. We conclude by arguing for the value of communal-based approaches to mentorship for more transformative outcomes related to equity, diversity, and inclusion.

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