
Giving Compass' Take:
- Experts at Stanford Social Innovation Review present four types of activism—advocating, subverting, facilitating, and healing—to challenge injustices in the workplace.
- How can you apply these strategies to your organization to create a more diverse, equitable, inclusive, and just workplace?
- Learn more about promoting social change in the workplace.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
Across the United States, people are fighting for equity and justice within their workplaces. This year, Glassdoor even named diversity and inclusion a top workplace trend. As more companies publicly denounce racism, we are also witnessing an increasing number of organizational activists, some of whom are committed to keeping their employers accountable to commitments to diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice (DEIJ).
Their efforts to challenge racism, sexism, heterosexism, ableism, and other workplace injustices often come with a steep price. This labor can be emotionally taxing, time intensive, and sometimes even punished. Those taking on the responsibility often must weigh their career goals against their desire for positive organizational change, a difficult balancing act known as tempered radicalism.
As researchers and consultants affiliated with the Morton Deutsch International Center for Cooperation and Conflict Resolution who specialize in how conflict can be leveraged for constructive organizational change, we became interested in the tension inherent in organizational activists' work and how it is approached by DEIJ proponents. In part, we wanted to help other people who were wondering how to get started with this difficult but important labor.
Through conversations and surveys involving dozens of organizational activists at nonprofits, corporations, and other firms, we identified four strategic approaches to their DEIJ efforts in the workplace. By showcasing the methods, risks, and results of each strategy, we aim to help people begin or improve their work as organizational activists. The examples are based on real incidents, but elements have been changed for clarity and to protect anonymity.
Read the full article about organizational activism by Allegra Chen-Carrel, Becca Bass, Danielle Coon, Keerthana Hirudayakanth, Diego Ramos Ochoa, and Peter T. Coleman at Stanford Social Innovation Review.