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No Politics Zone! This is a sincere question around how we conceptualize progress in Diversity/Equity/Inclusion (DEI). It is not a question inviting debate on the value of DEI.

For purposes of this question, it is assumed that the sentiment and overall mission of DEI is valid, but it is complicated to measure.

I am going to set up some context so it is clear what I am asking. The TL;DR; version is

"Has philosophy studied the underlying assumptions of DEI progress measures? Is the assumption that all groups are equally qualified for all positions in the general population, regardless of stratification method, sound? Or do we need to also adjust for differences in access to qualifying experiences? Or is it a normative statement meant to highlight differences in opportunities?


DEI has been increasingly important within many corporations, who have started introducing metrics/KPIs around progress in these dimensions. During a recent DEI session at my company (and many of you can also relate) we hear the refrain “We have made great progress but still have a long way to go.”

This got me thinking about how we measure progress towards DEI, so as to better identify what works and what doesn't.

A common way I see things measured is based on a proportion metric π (e.g., % holding sr management positions) calculated from an evaluation population E (e.g., my company), under a relevant stratification σ (e.g., gender) and then comparing it to the proportion of each stratum in a reference population R (e.g., Continental US Population), to calculate the representation gap

The representation gap γ(π,σ,E,R) is equal to π(E,σ) - σ(R), which is a list of such differences indexed over the elements of σ

Where σ(R) is just the proportion of the population in R that is in each stratum (evaluated element wise)

Example

A good example is looking at women holding senior leadership positions, where we have:

  • π = "% holding senior management position" [assume there is a rigorous definition of this]
  • E = US-based companies employing more than 5,000 people
  • σ = Gender
  • R = All registered workers in the lower 48 US states

Let's say we run our study and get π(E,σ)=10% (women), 90% (men) and σ(R)= 45% (women), 55% (men).

Therefore, γ(π,σ,E,R) = [women: 10%, men:90%] - [women: 45%, men:55%] = [women: -35%, men:+35%]

The conclusion most would draw from above is that working women are very underrepresented in senior management positions and we should take action to make promotion and evaluation policies less biased against women.

While this was made up, I think most would intuitively agree with the general sense that there are "not enough" women in senior management positions right now. However, the degree to which this is an issue and where to direct policy and non-policy action depends heavily on what we take R to be and if σ is sufficiently rich to capture confounding variables.

These are largely statistical questions, but there is a deeper, more principled assumption that I think warrants philosophical discussion. I'll call it the Equiqualification Principle:

Equiqualification Principle: For any choice of E,R,π,σ we expect γ(π,σ,E,R) = 0 for every element of γ(π,σ,E,R).

Where we can model the sampling distribution for a given E using multinomial distribution assuming the proportions hold from R.

With that, here's my more nuanced version of the question from my TL;DR; above:

Should we take the equiqualification principle as a positive or normative principle (or neither, if we think it's misguided) for measuring DEI objectives?

Related: Do we need to restrict R and/or σ to maintain relevance?

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  • Groups don't have sentiments, goals, or missions, and the goals of the individual people who comprise groups very seldom match the stated purpose for which the group ostensibly exists...
    – g s
    Commented Nov 5, 2023 at 3:34
  • I think the main part of your question stands, but as regards the beginning: The main goal of the people who sell DEI sessions to companies, for example, is almost certainly to sell more DEI sessions - so of course they're going to tell you: "The product you are buying from us is working, but you need to buy more of our product."
    – g s
    Commented Nov 5, 2023 at 3:42

1 Answer 1

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It depends on what your objectives are. It's pretty clear that life is riddled with all kinds of bias and prejudice, which probably accounts for some of the skewed outcomes we see, such as the high proportion of men in senior management roles. The question is whether your aim is to do away with bias and prejudice or to ensure that any selection process leads to an outcome that's representative of the wider population, because those two aims are not necessarily the same.

For example, some people will tell you that part of the reason why women are under-represented in various roles is because they are not interested in them, so even if you did away with bias and prejudice among the selectors, you still have a kind of bias and prejudice within the applicant pool that skews the outcome.

You also have to consider cultural effects. I am inclined to believe- albeit on the basis of no scientific evidence whatsoever- that part of the reason for the different career preferences of men and women is that we are treated differently from birth onwards. The fashion and cosmetics industries, for example, spend $billions annually in perpetuating stereotypes of femininity, and perhaps that contributes to the self image of certain women which in turn disinclines them from particular career paths. So should we be trying to prevent the kind of systematic and widespread social conditioning that leads to engrained gender-stereotypical mindsets, or should we be celebrating the stereotypical differences between men and women and accepting that they lead to different career aspirations? The same question can be posed in relation to countless other socially and culturally perpetuated differences in outlook, belief and aspirations that lead to skewed outcomes in many selections processes.

Your ingenious equiqualification principle, if I understand it correctly, seems to assume that the result of any selection process should represent the population at large, which might not be your actual policy objective, so you might need to tweak it somewhat. That said, if there was no better measure, the EP would seem to be a good yardstick for several purposes.

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  • +1 thank you for the response. Indeed the EP when applied to the overall population is not something I agree with. But I do hear many people speaking of these representation gaps as if they accept something like EP for the population at large (e.g., there are 50% women but only 25% of physicists are women). You did a great job of addressing my related question below the main one: "Do we need to restrict R and/or σ to maintain relevance?" - your points are spot on in my opinion.
    – Annika
    Commented Nov 4, 2023 at 22:59
  • My view is that R is NOT the population at large but must be restricted to the relevant subset of the population for the metric in question. In other words, I think it's not R but R(π, E), since R must be adjusted to account for the myriad items you hilighted.
    – Annika
    Commented Nov 4, 2023 at 23:01
  • To address the main question: do you see EP, appropriately applied, as a "is" or an "ought": accounting for all relevant factors in selecting R, are we in a position to say in fact that the populations should respect EP or that they ought to? I am inclined to see this as a normative rule vs descriptive.
    – Annika
    Commented Nov 4, 2023 at 23:04
  • Finally, any references in the literature to people who are studying this from a philosophical angle? I'm certainly not the first to think of this viewpoint
    – Annika
    Commented Nov 4, 2023 at 23:05
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    Hi Annika, many thanks indeed. Incidentally, I'm sorry about the first comment that your question prompted regarding Hamas- I have flagged it to the moderators. I will try to find some references for you if I get a chance. Commented Nov 5, 2023 at 9:01

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