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Education: PhD, University of Massachusetts-Amherst; MS, University of Massachusetts-Amherst Company Name: Partnership for Inclusion Leadership Industry: Nonprofit Company CEO: Youlanda Gibbons, PhD Company Headquarters Location: Washington, DC Words you live by: Sew good seeds, reap good fruit. Personal Philosophy: Stay focused and press ahead. What book are you reading: Memorial Drive: A Daughter’s Memoir by Natasha Trethewey What was your first job: College teaching assistant Favorite charity: The Humane Society Interests: Writing and organizational transformation Family: Support and laughter

The Double Jeopardy of Sexism and Racism

Until dealing with the negative impact of workplace sexism and racism is inextricably tied to organizational goals and outcomes, diversity and inclusion efforts will serve as revolving doors and lead to the same point of entry.”

For decades, evidence-based research has shown that double jeopardy negatively affects women of color in the workplace. Double jeopardy refers to the simultaneous forces of sexism and racism experienced by women of color. The compounded effects of misogyny and racism have resulted in a persistently low number of women of color in executive-level positions.

The internal and external expectations for women of color to perform as leaders ensure that double jeopardy is inescapable. Consequently, professional women of color must break through a concrete ceiling that is upheld by male standards of performance, leadership biases, emotional and mental exhaustion, lack of mentoring, and substandard management support. Until dealing with the negative impact of workplace sexism and racism is inextricably tied to organizational goals and outcomes, diversity and inclusion efforts will serve as revolving doors and lead to the same point of entry.

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