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What is Socially Disadvantaged

Handbook of Research on Workforce Diversity in a Global Society: Technologies and Concepts
Refers to individuals who have been subjected to ethnic prejudice or cultural bias because of their identity as a member of a group without regard to their individual qualities (SBA, 2004).
Published in Chapter:
Critical Race Theory: A Framework for Examining Social Identity Diversity of Black Women in Positions of Leadership
Marilyn Y. Byrd (University of Mary Hardin-Baylor, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-1812-1.ch025
Abstract
This chapter is a qualitative, narrative case study that seeks to unveil the social identity diversity of leadership from the perspective a Black woman leader. Social identity diversity is a form of difference that marginalized groups, such as Black women, experience in predominantly White organizational and institutional settings as a result of intersectionality. Social identity diversity creates multiple dynamics for groups such as Black women who hold leadership positions in the aforementioned settings. This study highlights the need for more inclusive and cultural perspectives of leadership, which calls for more inclusive theoretical frameworks that consider the social identity diversity of the leader. Critical race theory is presented as a theoretical framework that is useful for explaining how systems of power sustain domination and oppression in organizational and institutional settings. Implications for an emerging social justice paradigm are given.
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