Edmonton Journal

Fairness of Ontario university's diversity hiring targets questioned

Top-tier research positions exclude cis-gender men

- TYLER DAWSON

The University of Waterloo has restricted hiring for at least three top-tier research positions to certain demographi­c groups, in two instances excluding applicatio­ns from all cisgender men — whether they are white or people of colour — and in another refusing applicatio­ns from anyone who doesn't identify as Indigenous.

The restrictio­ns are aimed at addressing a lack of diversity among Canada Research Chairs — 2,285 prestigiou­s positions funded by the federal government and based at post-secondary institutio­ns across the country.

But some argue excluding people from the hiring process is not the best way to eliminate discrimina­tion.

A recent Canada Research Chair posting at the University of Waterloo for climate change, water or future cities research in the faculty of environmen­t is restricted to those who self-identify as women, transgende­r, non-binary or two spirit. A job notice in the faculty of engineerin­g has the same requiremen­t. A second engineerin­g position is open only to “First Nations, Métis, Inuit/inuk and those from other Indigenous communitie­s across Turtle Island.”

Marie-lynne Boudreau, director of performanc­e, equity and diversity for the Tri-agency Institutio­nal Programs Secretaria­t, which administer­s the Canada Research Chair program, said only a small number of positions are advertised with such exclusive criteria, as a way “to help institutio­ns meet their targets to ensure that we have representa­tion.”

“Men are not being barred from participat­ing in the program,” Boudreau said.

David Millard Haskell, a professor in the faculty of liberal arts at Laurier University, said Canadian universiti­es excluded Jewish intellectu­als until the 1930s. That's no longer the case, he said, but it's an illustrati­ve example of what happens when some people are excluded.

“Had we continued our discrimina­tion against Jewish professors ... there would have been a significan­t deficit in the advancemen­t of knowledge,” he said. “Thankfully, we moved in the right direction against discrimina­tion. But now, somehow, we've embraced this false notion that discrimina­tion can be good and it simply cannot.”

The Canada Research Chairs program, started in 2000, spends around $311 million per year “to attract and retain a diverse cadre of world-class researcher­s, to reinforce academic research and training excellence,” according to the program descriptio­n.

To address a lack of diversity among Canada Research Chairs, the program set targets to increase the representa­tion of certain groups. By December 2029, women and gender minorities must make up 50.9 per cent of all Canada Research Chairs across the entire program. Twenty-two per cent must be visible minorities; 7.5 per cent must be people with disabiliti­es and 4.9 per cent must be Indigenous. These statistics correspond roughly to population statistics.

“The targets are in place to address a historic and persistent underrepre­sentation in the program of individual­s from the four designated groups as identified in the employment equity act: women, racialized minorities, Indigenous Peoples, and persons with disabiliti­es,” says a statement from the program.

Eddy Ng, the Smith Professor of Equity & Inclusion in Business at Queen's University, said “on the surface, to the Canadian general public (this does) seem very discrimina­tory in the sense that it's reverse discrimina­tion, right?”

But, he said, that's not the case. If these jobs were open to everyone, he said, the hiring committee would be flooded with applicatio­ns, and that's where bias could come in, with hiring managers potentiall­y gravitatin­g toward an applicant who went to the same school as them, for example.

“When they have an open call, other subjective factors, sort of overwhelm and hijack the actual qualificat­ions needed,” Ng said. “To me, what Canada's doing is to actually make it fair. People who have access to influence and resources and know how to make the system work for them — that is not meritocrac­y.”

As of October 2021, 40.9 per cent of positions across the CRC program were filled by women and gender minorities, 22.8 per cent by visible minorities, 5.8 per cent by persons with disabiliti­es and 3.4 per cent by Indigenous people, according to the latest informatio­n on the program website.

A majority (54.2 per cent) of Canada Research Chairs are men, and the gender ratios persist within the other designated categories.

There are three deadlines for universiti­es to meet the program's diversity targets — December 2022, December 2025 and December 2027 — which were set in the wake of human rights complaints that argued white men were overrepres­ented in the program to the detriment of people who belong to protected groups.

While the program as a whole has diversity targets, each institutio­n sets its own diversity targets that account for factors such as population.

Individual institutio­ns are also free to restrict hiring to specific groups in order to meet their diversity targets or even exceed them.

Erica Ifill, founder of Not In My Colour, a diversity, equity and inclusion consultanc­y, described the system as “better than nothing,” but argued it does little to change the structures that would make such a system necessary.

“What are they doing to maybe fix the pipeline that they have to actually find these people in the future so that they won't have to put quotas in?” Ifill said.

Research from the University of Saskatchew­an shows that 82.4 per cent of respondent­s believe diversity is “fairly” or “very” important in the workplace. Paradoxica­lly, the researcher­s note, despite this widespread belief, 59.8 per cent of respondent­s believe demographi­cs shouldn't factor into hiring decisions, focusing on perceived merit, even at the risk of reducing workplace diversity.

“In general when immutable characteri­stics become the bar by which someone is offered a job, well, of course, you're going to have people who are not as qualified,” Haskell said. “And, the thing that concerns me is ... it's suggesting that they could not make it on their own merit. This is the height of racism. This is an incredibly racist policy, to say that someone who was a person of colour could not compete on their own competency and merit.”

Ifill said there's no reason why hiring for diversity would result in less competent candidates.

“Why are competence and race, diversity mutually exclusive? Because that's the assumption that you would have to make to actually buy that argument,” she said.

The University of Waterloo did not respond by press time to a list of questions.

THIS FALSE NOTION THAT DISCRIMINA­TION CAN BE GOOD.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? The University of Waterloo is restrictin­g who can apply for some top Canada Research Chair positions in a bid to address a lack of diversity. But some argue excluding people is not the best way to eliminate discrimina­tion.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES The University of Waterloo is restrictin­g who can apply for some top Canada Research Chair positions in a bid to address a lack of diversity. But some argue excluding people is not the best way to eliminate discrimina­tion.

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