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Qualified

How Competency Checking and Race Collide at Work

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 14 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 14 weeks

A groundbreaking work challenging the false narrative that diversity equals a lack of qualifications by uncovering the impact of "competency checking," a practice that unjustly scrutinizes Black people and other people of color, forcing them to repeatedly prove their worth, intelligence, and even their right to be in the workplace.

The advancement of Black and other people of color in the workplace is under attack as there is a turn away from the promise of the "racial reconciliation" of 2020. This period saw Black talent rise in the workplace from DEI managers to CEOs to junior-level hires. Yet, the post-2020 workplace is seeing an alarming retreat from creating workplaces and leadership that reflect the nation's diversity.

That retreat is characterized by underemployment, cracked glass cliffs, toxic work environments, and claims of "empty pipelines." More concerning, Black professionals and other people of color often face greater scrutiny than their peers regarding job applications, work experience, and qualifications to even be considered for employment or advancement. And that scrutiny has a name: Competency Checking.

When it comes to hiring Black talent, the pipeline isn't broken; rather, it is the assumptions we make about who is competent and qualified. In Qualified, award-winning executive and journalist Shari Dunn combines deep research with enlightening interviews and anecdotes from across the broad spectrum of her career to uncover the history of Competency Checking, how it manifests in the workplace, and what can be done to change it. Competency checking, Dunn argues, continues to be practiced consciously and unconsciously and is the key reason why Black people and other people of color are underrepresented in so many industries and why there continues to be a revolving door of Black talent even after the hiring surges of 2020.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 6, 2025
      People of color are held back in the workplace by unjustifiably critical white colleagues, according to this eye-opening debut report. DEI consultant Dunn calls white skepticism of Black workers’ abilities “competency checking,” suggesting it usually takes the form of assuming Black intellectual inferiority, expressing surprise or unease when such expectations are upended, and defying the authority of Black individuals. Contending that Black employees are often subjected to heightened scrutiny, Dunn cites an experiment that found law firm partners picked out errors that didn’t exist in a legal memo when they thought it was prepared by a Black man and overlooked actual errors when they believed a white man wrote it. Competency checking can be particularly hard on Black women, Dunn argues, drawing on client interviews to suggest that Black female employees often meet resistance when exercising authority because doing so upsets the stereotype of the subservient domestic worker. Dunn marshals a damning array of studies demonstrating the persistence of workplace racism (one found that white workers were more likely to secure well-paying jobs than Black peers with equal education levels), and her pragmatic solutions include nixing such biased screening tools as personality tests and conducting audits to determine problematic practices in hiring and promotion. This is essential reading for anyone invested in creating a more equitable workplace. Agent: Susanna Einstein, Einstein Literary.

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  • English

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