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Brexit signals segregation and xenophobia

What­ev­er your view on the deci­sion to leave the Euro­pean Union, the vote itself was polar­is­ing, turn­ing a com­plex set of issues and per­spec­tives into a bina­ry deci­sion. The resul­tant polit­i­cal change, rather than being a steady­ing mea­sure and coun­ter­weight to polar­i­sa­tion, has actu­al­ly exac­er­bat­ed it.

Since the Brex­it vote, report­ed inci­dents of xeno­pho­bia have increased across Britain. The neg­a­tive noise around Brex­it has the poten­tial not only to harm diver­si­ty, but also to dam­age the busi­ness case for dif­fer­ence in the first place.

The econ­o­my is per­haps the key deter­mi­nant of social cohe­sion. Less diver­si­ty in the UK work­force could result in even low­er pro­duc­tiv­i­ty, low­er resilience to shocks and high­er expo­sure to risk. We know from his­to­ry what can hap­pen when mar­kets crash. The pound has plunged to its low­est lev­el in more than 30 years. Dur­ing There­sa May’s recent Con­ser­v­a­tive Par­ty con­fer­ence speech it depre­ci­at­ed fur­ther minute by minute, line by line, as a “hard” Brex­it was artic­u­lat­ed.

Exchange rate changes have made for­eign trav­el (and cul­tur­al expe­ri­ences) more expen­sive.  There are dan­gers for Britain’s research com­mu­ni­ty with Euro­pean part­ners drop­ping col­lab­o­ra­tive projects, fear­ful the UK won’t be able to access EU fund­ing.

The business of Brexit

The Char­tered Insti­tute of Per­son­nel and Devel­op­ment found 57 per cent of employ­ers have con­cerns that Brex­it will sig­nif­i­cant­ly weak­en their abil­i­ty to acquire and retain skilled employ­ees. The argu­ment of the leavers is that British work­ers can now take these jobs. But this like-for-like sub­sti­tu­tion is gross­ly sim­plis­tic, ignor­ing dif­fer­ent skillsets, geo­graph­i­cal loca­tions and pro­cliv­i­ties actu­al­ly to under­take the work.

A close vote has giv­en fuel to the forces of extrem­ism – once fringe views are now acquir­ing main­stream sta­tus

In this sense the vote has not only dam­aged Britain’s rep­u­ta­tion as a good home to over­seas work­ers, it could sig­nal regres­sion in our for­mer progress towards more mul­ti­cul­tur­al work­places. James O’Brien, the LBC radio pre­sen­ter, com­pares new home sec­re­tary Amber Rudd’s speech with lines from Adolf Hitler’s book.  “If you’re going to have a sharp line of dis­tinc­tion between peo­ple born here and peo­ple who just work here, you’re enact­ing chap­ter two of Mein Kampf. Strange times,” says Mr O’Brien.

Brexit employer concerns statIn one sense, the whole process of recruit­ment is a process of dis­crim­i­na­tion. We reject those we find unat­trac­tive, who we don’t want to asso­ciate with, peo­ple who will low­er our brand or sta­tus. But Brex­it has come at a time when more than ever an organisation’s recruit­ment efforts need to be focused on gain­ing the addi­tion­al com­pet­i­tive advan­tage that comes from a dif­fer­ent per­spec­tive, dif­fer­ent thought or dif­fer­ent back­ground.

We also tend to recruit in our own image. Our nat­ur­al ten­den­cy is to recruit peo­ple like us because they are the ones that “get it”. In this sense, Brex­it sim­ply indulges our pre-exist­ing uncon­scious bias­es. It allows us a false sense of secu­ri­ty, com­fort in being around peo­ple like us.

If we don’t cre­ate and nur­ture a cul­ture where an inclu­sive and diverse work­force is viewed in a pos­i­tive light, then the busi­ness ben­e­fits of diver­si­ty sim­ply won’t fol­low. The way the cam­paign was run, and the way it is still being con­duct­ed, is per­haps most harm­ful of all.

A close vote has giv­en fuel to the forces of extrem­ism – once fringe views are now acquir­ing main­stream sta­tus. To be clear, the threat to diver­si­ty comes not just from the leavers – social harm is also being inflict­ed by remain­ers too.  Extreme leavers cas­ti­gate remain­ers as a “met­ro­pol­i­tan lib­er­al elite” out of touch with dai­ly life for most peo­ple. Extreme remain­ers query the intel­li­gence of the leavers and whether they should have even had the right to vote on such an impor­tant top­ic.

Spotlight on diversity

The shock result has refo­cused atten­tion on diver­si­ty, includ­ing widen­ing rates of inequal­i­ty in Britain. We are remind­ed that seg­re­ga­tion is the default posi­tion and mul­ti­cul­tur­al­ism actu­al­ly has to be built – it doesn’t just hap­pen.

What­ev­er your views on Brex­it, it is clear that inclu­sive poli­cies are now required if we are not to implode

The vote realigned par­ty and social alle­giances. Both bankers and teach­ers vot­ed to remain.  Both elder­ly rich rur­al dwellers and young poor urban cit­i­zens vot­ed to leave. In that sense it rede­fined par­ty pol­i­tics and reawak­ened civic inter­est.

Diver­si­ty and inclu­sion have now moved up the agen­da. What were once fringe top­ics, seen as a sub-set of human resources, are now acquir­ing front-page sta­tus, and becom­ing a stand­ing agen­da item in many board­rooms and exec­u­tive com­mit­tees.

This new promi­nence is large­ly a result of a now burn­ing plat­form for action. What­ev­er your views on Brex­it, the US elec­tion or the Euro­pean refugee cri­sis, it is clear that inclu­sive poli­cies are now required if we are not to implode.

Empa­thy is required on both sides of the debate. It may be a bit­ter pill to swal­low for left-wingers to con­tem­plate empa­thy for Trump sup­port­ers and for Brex­i­teers to empathise with immi­grants, but that is now what is sore­ly need­ed.

Time to take action

Busi­ness­es are the new cen­tre ground. They have the com­mer­cial incen­tive to build inclu­sive cul­tures that will help them pro­tect not just their brands, but also their tal­ent. They need to imple­ment two work streams.

First, they need to redesign their sys­tems and process­es such as recruit­ment, pro­mo­tion and mar­ket­ing. Regard­less of indi­vid­ual world view, peo­ple can act more inclu­sive­ly by default through using nudges and behav­iour­al eco­nom­ics to influ­ence behav­iour. For exam­ple, hir­ing teams, over indi­vid­u­als, can result in a more mer­i­to­crat­ic and more diverse cohort.

Sec­ond, they need to embed inclu­sive lead­er­ship as a stan­dard lead­er­ship com­pe­ten­cy. For exam­ple, lead­ers need to be aware of their in and out groups, and active­ly diver­si­fy the cir­cles they move in and recruit from.

This is seri­ous. Organ­i­sa­tions such as Bar­clays, Deloitte and Tesco Bank have mul­ti­cul­tur­al net­works as one of their major strands of diver­si­ty. Doing noth­ing is not an option, unless we are will­ing to sit pas­sive­ly as seg­re­ga­tion strength­ens before us.

What’s required now is lead­er­ship, a bet­ter artic­u­la­tion of the ben­e­fits of dif­fer­ence, a redis­cov­ery of the dif­fer­ence all around us and then the gump­tion to take advan­tage of it.