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Higher Education Institutions Join Fortune 500 Companies in Diversity and Inclusion Pledge

A year ago, the CEO Action for Diversity and Inclusion launched (“the Action”). The Action, which is the brainchild of PricewaterhouseCooper’s (PwC) U.S. Chairman Tim Ryan, is a call to CEOs to pledge to advance the cause of diversity and inclusion by doing three specific things: create a safe environment for discussion of difficult issues; acknowledge and address unconscious bias; and share best practices. When the Action launched, 175 CEOs joined PwC in the pledge, including those of Fortune 500 companies like Cisco, HP, Morgan Stanley, Staples, Target, and Walmart. Today, there are more than 450 CEOs who have joined.

But it’s not just CEOs who are pledging to tackle the issues of unconscious bias and institutional discrimination. Presidents of colleges and universities have joined the march, with nearly 50 academic institutions and associations presently on board. In fact, local college and university presidents have joined the Action, including Framingham State University, Babson College, and Bentley University. For institutions of higher education, joining the Action will include taking a long, hard look at the demographics of all the groups that comprise the organization – from the student body, to the faculty, to the administration, to the board of directors – and having thoughtful, candid, and ongoing conversations about whether the statistics match the goals of the organization, and if not, why. Given the objectives of the Action, it makes perfect sense for presidents of schools to join CEOs in tackling pervasive and insidious institutional discrimination. Colleges and universities are places that encourage and foster open discussion and idea sharing, and it may be that the best practices will come from those schools that have taken the pledge.

The end goal of the Action will not happen overnight and success cannot be measured in hard numbers. After its inaugural year, a notable percentage of CEOs reported that their organizations were engaged in the difficult conversations, implementing training, and looking to their partners in the Action for support and guidance. Given this positive trajectory, PwC announced that it will spend $10 million underwriting the second year.

Categorized: Discrimination, Employment, Higher Education

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AiVi Nguyen
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AiVi Nguyen

AiVi Nguyen is a business lawyer with a specialty in litigation, a practical strategist with a focus on complex contract, real estate and employment disputes. AiVi represents businesses of all sizes and in all stages of growth in Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island in a wide variety of industries spanning from healthcare to craft breweries. “I think of myself as a problem solver,” she says. AiVi’s goal is to get her clients the best result in the most efficient manner. Sometimes that means taking a matter all the way through trial, where AiVi has proven to be an aggressive and successful advocate.

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About the Authors

AiVi Nguyen
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AiVi Nguyen

AiVi Nguyen is a business lawyer with a specialty in litigation, a practical strategist with a focus on complex contract, real estate and employment disputes. AiVi represents businesses of all sizes and in all stages of growth in Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island in a wide variety of industries spanning from healthcare to craft breweries. “I think of myself as a problem solver,” she says. AiVi’s goal is to get her clients the best result in the most efficient manner. Sometimes that means taking a matter all the way through trial, where AiVi has proven to be an aggressive and successful advocate.

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