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Leader and Society

Building a true meritocracy means removing barriers, not ignoring them

US President Donald Trump has pledged to dismantle diversity, equity and inclusion programmes in government agencies in order to build a ā€œmerit-basedā€ society. But psychological research shows that such initiatives can create fairer outcomes, if employed correctly

29 January 2025

WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 29: Pro Affirmative Action supporters and and counter protestors shout at each outside of the Supreme Court of the United States on Thursday, June 29, 2023 in Washington, DC. In a 6-3 vote, Supreme Court Justices ruled that race-conscious admissions programs at Harvard and the University of North Carolina are unconstitutional, setting precedent for affirmative action in other universities and colleges. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

In the late 18th century, mathematician and physicist Joseph-Louis Lagrange made a shocking discovery: his star student, a Monsieur Le Blanc, was actually a woman.

Lagrange taught at France’s Ɖcole Polytechnique, which allowed students toĀ receive lecture notes and submit work without attending the university in person. This was particularly beneficial to Sophie Germain, who longed to study mathematics despite objections from her parents. She took up the identity of a lapsed student and might have got away with it, but Lagrange noticed the vast and sudden improvement in Le Blanc’s work and demanded to meet in person.

Germain isn’t the only person to note how the name we use changes the way we are perceived. As psychologist Keon West explains here, experiments using identical job applications show that those with names assumed to belong to a Black person areĀ less successful than those with names thought to belong to a white person.

In recent years, many organisations have adopted measures to combat the biases that lead to these outcomes, such asĀ removing names from job applications. These measures fall under the umbrella of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). Now, however, US President Donald Trump hasĀ ordered government agencies to dismantleĀ DEI programmes, promising in his 20 January inauguration speech that society would be ā€œmerit-basedā€.

Trump’s approach to diversity, equity and inclusion is unlikely to produce a meritocracy

Some DEI initiatives have firmer grounding in evidence than others. As the rĆ©sumĆ© test demonstrates, meritĀ alone isn’t enough to overcome people’s biases, and a number of studiesĀ have shown that for disadvantaged groups. On the other hand, unconscious bias training, in the form of one-off sessions that aim to make employees aware of snap judgements they may make about people based on their race and gender, has .

Trump’s heavy-handed approach to DEI, based in ideology rather than evidence,Ā is unlikely to produce his desired outcome of a meritocracy. Instead of developing an organisation where the best people are encouraged to flourish, the current efforts seem to be fostering a culture of fear, with being warned of ā€œadverse consequencesā€ for failing to identify and end DEI work.

Thankfully for Germain, there were noĀ such consequences. Lagrange acceptedĀ her for who she was and championed her mathematical development. Despite this, she still used the Le Blanc pseudonym in some correspondence, most notably with mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss, who, on discovery of her true identity, wrote that she had ā€œnobler courage, quite extraordinary talents, and superior geniusā€. If we want more Germains toĀ flourish, we must acknowledge and address the barriers they face, not pretendĀ that they don’t exist.

 

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