Quarter of U.S. tech
workers perceive discrimination: survey
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[February 08, 2017]
By Deborah M. Todd
(Reuters) -
About
a quarter of U.S. workers in the technology sector, which has faced
criticism for a lack of diversity, said they felt discrimination at
their workplace in a survey released on Tuesday by job site Indeed.com.
The survey of 1,002 U.S. tech sector workers, conducted in December,
found that 24 percent said they felt they had been discriminated against
at their current companies due to their race, gender, age, religion or
sexual orientation.
The national survey was conducted online by survey consulting firm
Censuswide, which invited participants to opt in through an online
newsletter. This was the first such survey by Indeed.
Some 29 percent of female respondents said they experienced
discrimination compared with 21 percent of men. Some 32 percent of Asian
and nonwhite employees said they were discriminated against, versus 22
percent of white employees.
The survey did not provide details surrounding the nature of the
discrimination.
"These results should be seen as a wake-up call to the industry that
simply striving to hire diverse talent is not enough: culture and
attitude need to be addressed," said Raj Mukherjee, senior vice
president of product at Indeed.
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Over
the last three years Alphabet Inc's Google, Facebook Inc, Apple Inc and other
major tech companies have released employee demographic data, adjusted
recruiting strategies and offered training on unconscious bias.
Mukherjee added that companies should make greater efforts to include current
employees in its diversity initiative, since 57 percent of respondents said they
did not know what actions their company is taking to address the issue.
An additional 25 percent did not believe their companies were taking any action.
"With so many people disengaged it's hard for real change to occur," said Rev.
Jesse Jackson, whose Rainbow Push Coalition led a campaign in 2014 urging tech
companies to release employee demographic data and diversify, in a statement.
(Reporting by Deborah M. Todd, editing by Peter Henderson and Lisa Shumaker)
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