• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Falling between the Cracks: What Diversity Means for Black Women in Higher Education
  • Contributor: Jones, Cecily
  • Published: SAGE Publications, 2006
  • Published in: Policy Futures in Education, 4 (2006) 2, Seite 145-159
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.2304/pfie.2006.4.2.145
  • ISSN: 1478-2103
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: The concepts of social justice and diversity have attained currency in political discourse and in organisational policy. Since the 1960s, the concept of social justice has been at the forefront of governmental drives to eradicate social inequalities, delivered through a framework of equality of opportunity. Recent years have, however, witnessed a shift away from the ‘traditional’ equal opportunity model of achieving equality towards the adoption of diversity management as a strategy of organisational policy. This shift comes in the wake of the increasing recognition of the diverse nature of employees in the workplace. A cornerstone of diversity management is its stress on the recognition and valuing of individual rather than social-group difference. An emphasis on individual difference may, however, carry profound consequences for the achievement of equality, for it may in fact serve to obscure and exacerbate the structural causes of inequality and, moreover, it may be an inadequate approach to countering the racialised discrimination and disadvantage encountered by black female academics. This article therefore asks: what are the implications of this shift for black and minority ethnic women academics in higher education in the United Kingdom today? Is it possible for higher education institutions and other employers to initiate a diversity policy that not only recognises differences, but at the same time ensures the delivery of policies and practices that challenge inequality?