UNCONSCIOUS BIAS: RECOGNISED AND MANAGED?
Rashda Rana SC, ArbitralWomen President I want to start with my own sub heading the subliminal message that I want to convey to you today:“The positive thinker sees the invisible, feels the intangible and achieves the impossible.”That’s what I want you to be from this day onwards. And why is that important? Because we want to eliminate discrimination, prejudice and bias on the road to equality We all know and have certainly heard that diversity is an important ingredient in corporate success since it:
- Creates greater creativity/reduction of “groupthink”: people’s experiences influence the way they see and resolve problems. Therefore, the more diversified a team is (be it lawyers or the arbitral panel), the more ideas will be presented and the greater the chance will be of obtaining the best possible result;
- Improves transparency/corporate governance;
- Increases performance, including financial;
- Results in greater retention of talents, which is especially important for law firms.
“A diverse and inclusive workforce is necessary to drive innovation, foster creativity, and guide business strategies. Multiple voices lead to new ideas, new services, and new products, and encourage out-of-the-box thinking. Today, companies no longer view diversity and inclusion efforts as separate from their other business practices, and recognize that a diverse workforce can differentiate them from their competitors by attracting top talent and capturing new clients.”So, if greater diversity and inclusivity are such fantastic goals, then why haven’t we leapt to the chance to achieve that goal in super quick time? Certainly for some years now there have been in place diversity awareness programs in many organisations. A 2009 review [2] (undertaken over a 5 year period looking at nearly a thousand studies) showed that the effects of most diversity efforts, including training, remain unknown, and a 2006 study looking at data from 708 private companies found that diversity training didn’t produce more diverse workforces. The problem identified as a result is that they weren’t taking into account all of peoples’ responses. One of the reasons behind why the goal hasn’t been achieved and why there is new thinking about how to improve diversity lies in the concept of unconscious bias, hidden bias, implicit bias. These biases are our “mental shortcuts based on social norms and stereotypes.” (Guynn, 2015). Over the last three decades, our understanding of unconscious bias has evolved. The nature of unconscious bias is well understood, and there is even an instrument (Implicit Association Test) to assess unconscious bias which has been developed and rigorously tested. A substantial amount of research has been published demonstrating the impact of unconscious bias in various arenas and how bias may be contributing to disparities in various industries. Here’s what we know:
- Unconscious biases develop at an early age: biases emerge during middle childhood and appear to develop across childhood (Dore, 2014).
- Unconscious biases have real world effects on behavior (Dasgupta, 2004).
- Unconscious biases are malleable, that is, one can take steps to minimize the impact of unconscious bias (Dasgupta, 2013; Dasgupta & Greenwald, 2013).
Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.It’s true I too have sometimes believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast. If I didn’t, if I couldn’t, then I wouldn’t, I couldn’t keep going with my own belief that equality is achievable and should be pursued. It gives me that determination to succeed in bringing about equality. I want you to visualize that seeming impossible being converted into reality because of your actions. We’ve probably all come across examples of unconscious bias at play in our everyday personal and professional lives but here are some kooky examples of unconscious bias but all of which could have an equally powerful impact. Studies have found that:
- blond women’s salaries were 7 percent higher than women who were brunettes or redheads.[3]
- for every 1 percent increase in a woman’s body mass, there was a .6 percent decrease in family income.[4]
- “mature-faced” people had a career advantage over “baby-faced” people (people with large, round eyes, high eyebrows and a small chin).[5]
- male and female scientists — trained to reject the subjective — were more likely to hire men, rank them higher in competency than women, and pay them $4,000 more per year than women (Wilkie, 2015).[6]
- Tall men in business may find unconscious bias to work in their favor. Fifty-eight percent of Fortune 500 CEOs are just shy of six feet tall, while only 14.5 percent of the male population are that same height. Tall men, then, tend to move into leadership positions far more frequently than their more diminutive counterparts (Price, n.d.). That would mean, for instance, that Napoleon is to be regarded as an atypical member of that group.
If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.'Feeling' unconscious bias I mentioned earlier that various institutions have developed tests for unconscious bias. What they also found was that even the very experience of taking a test of hidden bias may be helpful, many test takers said they could "feel" their hidden prejudices as they performed the tests. They can feel themselves unable to respond as rapidly to (for example) flower + unpleasant than to and pain + unpleasant. The very act of taking the tests can force hidden biases into the conscious part of the mind so that you become aware of them. We would like to believe that when a person has a conscious commitment to change, the very act of discovering one's hidden biases can propel one to act to correct for it. It may not be possible to avoid the automatic stereotype or prejudice, but it is certainly possible to consciously rectify it. Luckily, the mind and the unconscious within it are malleable. There are more than 150 identified unconscious biases, making the task of rooting them out and addressing them daunting. But, let’s look at a few of the known unconscious biases that directly impact the workplace and what we do and how we work and how we live. They include:
- Affinity bias: The tendency to warm up to people like ourselves.
- Halo effect: The tendency to think everything about a person is good because you like that person.
- Perception bias: The tendency to form stereotypes and assumptions about certain groups that make it impossible to make an objective judgement about members of those groups.
- Confirmation bias: The tendency for people to seek information that confirms pre-existing beliefs or assumptions.
- Group think: This bias occurs when people try too hard to fit into a particular group by mimicking others or holding back thoughts and opinions. This causes them to lose part of their identities and causes organizations to lose out on creativity and innovation.
- Develop concrete, objective indicators & outcomes for hiring, evaluation, and promotion to reduce standard stereotypes (Fiske & Taylor, 1991; Heilman, 2001; Bernat & Manis, 1994)
- Develop standardized criteria to assess the impact of individual contributions in performance evaluations (Heilman & Haynes, 2005)
- Develop and utilize structured interviews and develop objective evaluation criteria for hiring (Martell & Guzzo, 1991; Heilman, 2001)
- Provide unconscious bias training workshops for all constituents
- Promoting self-awareness: recognizing one’s biases using the Implicit Association Test (or other instruments to assess bias) is the first step.
- Understanding the nature of bias is also essential. The strategy of categorization that gives rise to unconscious bias is a normal aspect of human cognition. Understanding this important concept can help individuals approach their own biases in a more informed and open way (Burgess, 2007).
- Opportunities to have discussions, with others (especially those from socially dissimilar groups) can also be helpful. Sharing your biases can help others feel more secure about exploring their own biases. It’s important to have these conversations in a safe space-individuals must be open to alternative perspectives and viewpoints. This means developing the vocabulary for that discussion to take place
- Facilitated discussions and training sessions promoting bias literacy utilizing the concepts and techniques listed about have been proven effective in minimizing bias. Evidence suggests that providing unconscious bias training for faculty members reduces the impact of bias in the workplace (Carnes, 2012).
“Progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything”.In order to progress in society, in order to bring about the changes we’ve talked about today, we need to change our minds, deliberately, actively by being alert to and aware of our biases and acting to control them. I want to leave you with the same point at which I started and that is thinking about getting over the notion that some things are just impossible and not capable of being changed with the wise words of a civil rights activist who was otherwise generally known as The Greatest:
“Impossible is just a small word that is thrown around by small men who find it easier to live in a world they’ve been given to explore the power they have, than to change it. Impossible is not a fact. It is an opinion. Impossible is not a declaration. It is a dare. Impossible is potential. Impossible is temporary. Impossible is nothing!”
[1] Available at: http://www.forbes.com/forbesinsights/innovation_diversity/, consulted on January 27, 2016.
[2] Prejudice Reduction: What Works? A Review and Assessment of Research and Practice, Annu. Rev. Psychol. 2009. 60:339–67, by Elizabeth Levy Paluck (Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University) and Donald P. Green (Institution for Social and Policy Studies, Yale University).
[3] Queensland University
[4] National Bureau of Economic Research
[5] Duke University
[6] Yale University