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Report to the Industry: Looking Inward, Going Forward

FOREWARD
By Toni F. Laws
Executive Director, NAMME

In this the fourth in a series of reports that explore the complex issues of diversity, the McCormick Tribune Fellows, a multi-racial, multi-cultural group of accomplished print and broadcast executives, tackle the frontier of inclusion. They look at how differences that may exist because of race/ethnicity, gender and age can affect the full realization of inclusiveness in media companies of today.

As the title Looking Inward, Going Forward reveals, the Fellows take an introspective journey to examine the “stuff” we all bring to the table about ourselves and others, about the groups to which we belong and those we don’t. Faced with the vulnerabilities such journeys evoke, the report spotlights the reality that progress toward inclusion cannot and should not be tasked to whites alone.

Assigned the task of capturing the Fellows’ journey is Keith Woods, author of the three previous McCormick Tribune Fellowship reports: Do We Check It At The Door, Executives of Color: What It Takes To Succeed and Leading the Way: Making Diversity Real. As an experienced journalist and diversity practitioner, Keith brings the Fellows’ insights and perspectives about diversity and inclusion to life in ways that honors their experiences, challenges the status quo and inspires reflection and action.

INTRODUCTION
By Keith Woods

In three previous surveys and reports — Do We Check It At The Door?, Leaders Of Color: What It Takes To Succeed, and Leading The Way: Making Diversity Real — the Fellows were relatively unified in their views, around a common sense of purpose. They spoke with a dominant, if not unanimous voice. But in the 2004 survey, where the definition of victim and perpetrator might change with each new question, consensus was hard to come by.

Those survey findings foretold a series of difficult conversations at the Fellows’ annual “Fall Forum,” where they lived out the struggles of talking across difference that they have lamented in previous surveys and forums. The Fellows found it hard to explore the differences among them.

"We want to be as much together and keep our issues to ourselves, but demonstrate that we’re a united front," a Fellow said, explaining the difficulty he had with talking about intercultural conflict.

"I think some of that is, ‘Let’s not get into our differences. We need to come forward united.’"

Less contentious were issues regarding the more familiar, historically entrenched problems of diversity.

The results of the survey and the Fellows discussions should obliterate the resilient notion that there is a monolithic view held by those at the forefront of diversity work in media organizations. It should discomfit those too willing to assign all the work of personal growth around diversity to white people. And it should underscore the complexity of an effort that demands persistent, thoughtful, creative attention from people who recognize that the diversity landscape – and the challenges embedded in it – is ever-changing.

Given the small number of Fellows in the survey, readers of this report should use the results as a conversation starter, an indicator of what might be true, not as a definitive word. They should be careful not to generalize the findings too broadly, particularly across the racial and ethnic groups. As with each of the previous Fellows reports, this report’s greatest potential lies in its ability to inform, educate and provoke.


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