A Brief History of Diversity in The Workplace

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A Brief History of Diversity in the

Workplace [Infographic]
Feb 17, 2016-




This is not so much a history as it is an our-story.

Groan if you want, but it’s kind of true. The history of diversity in the workplace  is by
definition the story of how the concept of inclusion finally worked its way into our
national narrative. When you have equality in the workforce, it creates a domino effect
of change across the socioeconomic system.

Long story short: the face of the American workforce has changed dramatically over
the past century (and there’s still a ways to go). Major milestones include:

 In 1948, President Truman officially desegregated the armed forces


with Executive Order 9981, which made discrimination based on "race,
color, religion or natural origin" illegal for all members of the armed
services.
 The Civil Rights Act of 1964 dealt a crucial blow to discrimination in the
workforce by making it illegal for any business, private or public, to practice
discriminatory hiring (and firing) practices.
 More than forty years later, with the tech boom in full swing, journalists at
the San Jose Mercury News and CNN Money began investigations into
the workforce diversity at the Silicon Valley tech giants. Half the
companies under investigation were able to block the release of the data
from the U.S. Department of Labor, claiming that the data fell under the
realm of "trade secret" and that releasing it would cause "competitive harm."
That last incident, as you may know, caused a torrential downpour of bad publicity,
and most of the companies involved have changed their tune in recent years, not just
releasing their diversity stats but also actively trying to improve them.

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with this infographic:" quote="Take a look back at the history of #diversity in the
workplace with this infographic!"]

Today, we look at diversity as not just a moral issue, but a business issue. It’s a proven
fact  that diverse companies perform at least 35% better than their homogeneous
counterparts. That kind of proof is pretty hard to ignore, and companies that do are
starting to feel the backlash.

So check out this brief history of the “diversity m

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