Seen it on my Mastodon feed (originally from reddit).

  • tabris
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    86 months ago

    A lot of people misunderstand DEI questions, so here’s the theory. DEI questions are for HR, and are not seen by the interviewer. They’re used to track how successful applicants from different protected groups and social classes are in interviews. The goal is to make sure people from groups that are historically discriminated against are successful in interviews at a similar rate to people who are not from a protected group or class.

    Yes, these questions can feel invasive. As someone from a protected group myself, I’ve felt, at times, that these questions step over a line. But having seen when they are applied correctly, they do have a positive effect.

    Are they perfect? Fuck no. HR can slip up, sometimes deliberately so, and share these answers beyond where they should be shared. Or they’re not tracked correctly and merely used as a way to excuse systemic failures.

    Can they be used for good? Absolutely yes. Systemic injustices are difficult to correct for, take time, and work to overcome. This is a part of that. But I don’t begrudge you exercising your right not to answer.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      36 months ago

      Thank you for the detailed response!

      Having seen HR slip up one too many times, my natural response was to question the need for questions like this.

  • @Hobbes_Dent
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    56 months ago

    Not Irish, sorry, but what the fuck?

    Those seem very intrusive.

  • @[email protected]
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    36 months ago

    The UK Civil Service and some large organisations here in the UK are doing this. They’ve added class/social mobility to the diversity questions, so these all come in the same section as gender/religion/age/etc.