How You Act Makes Workplace Equity Happen
Museopunks. This week hosts Suse Anderson and Ed Rodley examine ICOM's existential crisis over the definition of the word 'museum' by gathering voices from around the world. Each of the 11 participants (myself included) muses on the nature and importance of the definition. For those of us at work in museum land it's an interesting chorus. Take a listen.
********** This was also the week Anne Ackerson and I talked about gender and leadership with our Johns Hopkins graduate students. It's been a while since I've mentioned gender here, but given that we're a century from the passage of the 19th amendment, it's appropriate to remember (again) how far we've come, and how much work there is left to do. In addition to talking with our students, I also listened to NPR's On Point where Meghna Chakrabarti and David Folkenflik spoke with three individuals about the fact that 2019 marks the moment when women become the majority in the college-educated workforce. As a woman and a member of a generation who were trail blazers in the workplace even when we didn't realize it, I need only speak with our graduate students to understand the breadth and depth of the distance we've travelled. The women are acutely aware of workplace gender issues, having suffered the slings and arrows of mansplaining, verbal head-patting, not to mention more pointed harassment. Unlike my generation, many are also woke to the wage gap. For the men, things are different. They are different, and quick to point out that they are not their father's or grandfather's generation. Some reference the strong women in their lives, suggesting the way they were raised means they behave differently. And therein lies an issue. They believe their values and behavior will change the museum workplace. I hope they're right. Their words were echoed by the On Point interviewees, one of whom suggested part of our problems stem from the Boomer generation. Although I'd like to be more optimistic, it's hard to believe that once the last Boomer folds her tent and heads for retirement, that the workplace will be cleansed of gender bias. While anything is possible, as far as I know, Target's toy section is still filled with gendered toys: girls' toys are pink and sparkly and boys' toys are camouflage-colored and make noise. Even searching for a toy is a gendered experience. I don't mean to single out Target, only to point out that unless millennials were raised by unique parents, they are just as likely to suffer gender imprinting as earlier generations, and are as subject as the rest of us to the relentless barrage of gender norms. And woe betide the non-binary child for whom a neat parsing of pink and princess vs. red and soldier does not not fit. The point is only--and we've said this countless times here--workplace equity isn't about you and your politically correct feelings. Your upbringing and your beliefs are in fact, immaterial. What matters is how you act: How the bucket of impressions and experiences you carry with you takes meaning as it makes its way into the world. No matter how kind, empathetic and understanding you are, if somewhere in your lizard brain, you implicitly believe that men are natural leaders, that informs your decision making as leader and follower. Museum workplace gender bias is still a thing, and change only happens when staff is self-aware, understands their workplace culture, and when museums and heritage organizations actively support staff in all their glorious diversity. While we're waiting for perfection:
Don't ascribe bias to one generation while not looking to your own as well.
If you have power, acknowledge it.
Don't ask for feedback if you aren't ready for a response that may be at odds with yours.
Try not to avoid conflict at the expense of honest communication that could clear the air.
If you are in a leadership position, know yourself and how you present. Ditto for your museum or heritage organization.
Remember, you make change through action, and your observation is your obligation.
Be respectful of other's experience. No matter how informed, intentional and empathetic you are, their narrative may be different, and it takes time to build trust. Yours for an equitable workplace, Joan Baldwin Image: Portland Art Museum
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