For purposes of this policy, we have prepared the following definitions that apply:
Diversity:The condition of being different or having differences. Differences among people occur in a variety of respects, such as age, class, ethnicity, gender, health, physical and mental ability, race, sexual orientation, religion, physical size, education level, job and function, personality traits, and other human differences. Some describe organizational diversity as social heterogeneity.
Equity:Fair treatment for all while striving to identify and eliminate inequities and barriers.
Inclusion:A value supported by incorporating diverse perspectives and practices to promote, develop, evolve, and implement an organization’s culture, policies, systems, and norms. An inclusive environment is one where people encourage and embrace different perspectives, ideas, and experiences to create meaningful opportunity, interaction, communication, information, and decision-making prowess. An inclusive workplace is one where people not only feel included, but also where people recognize when workplace traditions and events may result in the exclusion of individuals.
Accessibility:The "ability to access" the functionality of a system or entity and gain the related benefits. The degree to which a product, service, or environment is accessible by as many people as possible.
Accessible design ensures both direct (unassisted) access and indirect access through assistive technology (e.g., computer screen readers). Universal design ensures that an environment can be accessed, understood, and used to the greatest extent possible by all people. |
Belonging:A feeling of being happy or comfortable as part of a particular group and having a good relationship with the other members of the group because they welcome you and accept you. A sense of belonging is one of humanity’s most basic needs.
Accommodation:A change in the environment or in the way things are customarily done that enables an individual with a disability to have equal opportunity, access, and participation
Bias:Prejudice in favor of or against one thing, person, or group compared with another, usually in an unfair or negative way. Unconscious bias, also known as implicit bias, is defined as “attitudes and stereotypes that influence judgment, decision-making, and behavior in ways that are outside of conscious awareness and/or control.”
Intersectionality:The complex, cumulative way in which the effects of multiple forms of discrimination (such as racism, sexism, and classism) combine, overlap, or intersect, and their multiple effects on the same individuals or groups. Also refers to the view that overlapping and interdependent systems of discrimination and inequality can more effectively be addressed together.
Cultural Humility:Cultural humility is a lifelong practice of self-reflection about one’s own cultural identities. Through that introspection, a humble curiosity of other cultural identities evolves with the goal of improving relationships. This introspective practice of cultural identity gives way to an openness to otherness. Supplemental to the concept of cultural competence, cultural humility is a personal commitment to being humble, curious, and flexible, both inwardly and outwardly. Cultural humility is not achieved after a set amount of study; it is an ever-evolving practice.
Privilege:An unearned, sustained advantage that comes from race, gender, sexuality, ability, socioeconomic status, age, and other differences.
Racism:A belief that racial differences produce or are associated with inherent superiority or inferiority. Racially based prejudice, discrimination, hostility, or hatred. Institutionalized racism, also known as systemic racism, refers to forms of racism that are engrained in society or organizations. It is when entire racial groups are discriminated against, or consistently disadvantaged, by larger social systems, practices, choices, or policies.
Ableism:Beliefs or practices that rest on the assumption that being able-bodied is “normal” while other states must be “fixed” or altered. This can result in devaluing or discriminating against people with physical, intellectual, or psychiatric disabilities. Institutionalized ableism may include or take the form of organizational barriers, both intentional and unintentional, that result in disparate treatment of people with disabilities (PwDs).
Cultural Competence:Behaviors, attitudes, and policies that enable individuals to work effectively in cross-cultural situations. Cultural competence promotes the respect for and understanding of diverse cultures and social groups as well as the unique attributes of each individual within a larger organization. Cultural competence is based on integrating the awareness and learned skills needed to educate, work with, and serve people from diverse backgrounds and social identities effectively and sensitively.
Culture:The values, attitudes, beliefs, experiences, and customs shared and communicated by a group of people that contribute to a person’s sense of identity. Culture also includes the knowledge and collective experiences shared across generations within a cultural group.