[P2P-F] Fwd: Ending Discrimination Through Unity: The 2022 Counterweight Conference

Michel Bauwens michelsub2004 at gmail.com
Sun Sep 18 11:05:52 CEST 2022


very important conference about the frontiers about the re-emerging
inclusionary anti-racism:



---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Steven J. Lawrence from Ground Experience <
groundexperience at substack.com>
Date: Sun, Sep 18, 2022 at 7:16 AM
Subject: Ending Discrimination Through Unity: The 2022 Counterweight
Conference
To: <michelsub2004 at gmail.com>


The Counterweight Conference's contribution to the depolarization movement
and my role as conference speaker, recruiter, advisor, and academic
affiliate
 ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌
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Open in browser
<https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=266471&post_id=73773475&utm_source=email>
Ending Discrimination Through Unity: The 2022 Counterweight Conference
<https://substack.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.Jxhle9BjAVu4g0TBI7xR4uOwjT-uXSPiHOstPlqSizo?>The
Counterweight Conference's contribution to the depolarization movement and
my role as conference speaker, recruiter, advisor, and academic affiliate

<https://substack.com/redirect/bbdccbd1-392d-466d-856d-ee462e00e9b0?r=3zjg0>
Steven J. Lawrence
<https://substack.com/redirect/bbdccbd1-392d-466d-856d-ee462e00e9b0?r=3zjg0>
Sep 18

<https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=266471&post_id=73773475&utm_source=substack&isFreemail=true&submitLike=true&token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo2Njk3MDA4LCJwb3N0X2lkIjo3Mzc3MzQ3NSwicmVhY3Rpb24iOiLinaQiLCJpYXQiOjE2NjM0NzgyMTIsImV4cCI6MTY2NjA3MDIxMiwiaXNzIjoicHViLTI2NjQ3MSIsInN1YiI6InJlYWN0aW9uIn0.jLXjtggoJjg4tKdGtNJu0EcAO9aNBb1vsOrhmyLdDvM&utm_medium=email>
<https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=266471&post_id=73773475&utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email&isFreemail=true&comments=true&token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo2Njk3MDA4LCJwb3N0X2lkIjo3Mzc3MzQ3NSwiaWF0IjoxNjYzNDc4MjEyLCJleHAiOjE2NjYwNzAyMTIsImlzcyI6InB1Yi0yNjY0NzEiLCJzdWIiOiJwb3N0LXJlYWN0aW9uIn0.W3g1jleJlFptoO0EmgQpXat9lBfBc4cOe-eNfjPplfU&utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email>
<https://substack.com/redirect/2/eyJlIjoiaHR0cHM6Ly9ncm91bmRleHBlcmllbmNlLnN1YnN0YWNrLmNvbS9wL2VuZGluZy1kaXNjcmltaW5hdGlvbi10aHJvdWdoLXVuaXR5P3V0bV9zb3VyY2U9c3Vic3RhY2smdXRtX21lZGl1bT1lbWFpbCZ1dG1fY29udGVudD1zaGFyZSZhY3Rpb249c2hhcmUmdG9rZW49ZXlKMWMyVnlYMmxrSWpvMk5qazNNREE0TENKd2IzTjBYMmxrSWpvM016YzNNelEzTlN3aWFXRjBJam94TmpZek5EYzRNakV5TENKbGVIQWlPakUyTmpZd056QXlNVElzSW1semN5STZJbkIxWWkweU5qWTBOekVpTENKemRXSWlPaUp3YjNOMExYSmxZV04wYVc5dUluMC5XM2cxamxlSmxGcHRvTzBFbWdRcFhhdDlsQmZCYzRjT2UtZU5malBwbGZVIiwicCI6NzM3NzM0NzUsInMiOjI2NjQ3MSwiZiI6dHJ1ZSwidSI6NjY5NzAwOCwiaWF0IjoxNjYzNDc4MjEyLCJleHAiOjE2NjYwNzAyMTIsImlzcyI6InB1Yi0wIiwic3ViIjoibGluay1yZWRpcmVjdCJ9.8KoB2wzDyqfxXHpnhUCtmEKiA0Ag99LI6abdJewd6SQ?>
▷  Listen
<https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=266471&post_id=73773475&utm_source=podcast-email&token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo2Njk3MDA4LCJwb3N0X2lkIjo3Mzc3MzQ3NSwiaWF0IjoxNjYzNDc4MjEyLCJleHAiOjE2NjYwNzAyMTIsImlzcyI6InB1Yi0yNjY0NzEiLCJzdWIiOiJwb3N0LXJlYWN0aW9uIn0.W3g1jleJlFptoO0EmgQpXat9lBfBc4cOe-eNfjPplfU&play_audio=true>
SAVE
<https://substack.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.mrsfv5N3GytpUX-Q5lT7YcWHYdmeZxsal3XABg3OchA?>


On Saturday, September 24 at 10am, Eastern Standard Time, a recording of a
talk I gave will be broadcast live during the third day of the Counterweight
Conference for Liberal Approaches to Diversity and Inclusion
<https://substack.com/redirect/671dc066-5e5b-4354-8553-c7e690f93180?r=3zjg0>
followed by a live Q&A with me and the audience. My talk is titled,
“Shaping a Workplace Culture: The Fundamentals,” and explores one of the
most fundamental attributes of all in a leader who wishes to be
authentically influential: the need to acknowledge when they are wrong.

To sign up for my specific talk, please click here
<https://substack.com/redirect/bc660815-a59a-47f2-b92c-6cf62e0e2139?r=3zjg0>*.
<https://substack.com/redirect/bc660815-a59a-47f2-b92c-6cf62e0e2139?r=3zjg0>*
All talks are free for everyone during the conference and for 24 hours
after the conference. There are other options for those who wish to access
the talks after the conference has ended. The conference links I’ve
provided above will let people know what the options are and how to proceed.

Ground Experience is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts
and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Upgrade to paid
<https://substack.com/redirect/2/eyJlIjoiaHR0cHM6Ly9ncm91bmRleHBlcmllbmNlLnN1YnN0YWNrLmNvbS9zdWJzY3JpYmU_dG9rZW49ZXlKMWMyVnlYMmxrSWpvMk5qazNNREE0TENKcFlYUWlPakUyTmpNME56Z3lNVElzSW1WNGNDSTZNVFkyTmpBM01ESXhNaXdpYVhOeklqb2ljSFZpTFRJMk5qUTNNU0lzSW5OMVlpSTZJbU5vWldOcmIzVjBJbjAuZVJhZ1ppMlFPcVFJUEszUDNncWk2S3hwR1QtZ1VPUXRHcTlNT3hzdVVCWSZ1dG1fc291cmNlPXBvc3QiLCJwIjo3Mzc3MzQ3NSwicyI6MjY2NDcxLCJmIjp0cnVlLCJ1Ijo2Njk3MDA4LCJpYXQiOjE2NjM0NzgyMTIsImV4cCI6MTY2NjA3MDIxMiwiaXNzIjoicHViLTAiLCJzdWIiOiJsaW5rLXJlZGlyZWN0In0.D6CKXJICDLHfNE98RtAbZs-xgDNlad7uZdS8S437n9E?&utm_medium=email&utm_source=subscribe-widget-preamble&utm_content=73773475>
<https://substack.com/redirect/2eca67bc-8a3e-4d82-adad-8f884c1e534b?r=3zjg0>
*Why was I invited to give a talk at the conference?*

I’ve known the founder of Counterweight, Helen Pluckrose
<https://substack.com/redirect/8f2c1f45-e94e-4a77-bd24-38c233ee3d16?r=3zjg0>,
for about seven years now. I was an early supporter of her scholarship and
her advocacy for freedom of speech, conscience, thought, and expression
from the beginning and especially of her moral courage and unwavering
commitment to liberal humanism and the importance of what she calls
“evidence-based epistemology
<https://substack.com/redirect/58ab65c4-525a-4189-889c-d95a9cd5d341?r=3zjg0>”.


As I mentioned in the introduction to “Beyond Cynicism”
<https://substack.com/redirect/6bba7af5-a5f4-4c93-8407-525c52c45d8f?r=3zjg0>,
Helen Pluckrose asked me to join Counterweight at the beginning of its
founding as one of its Academic Affiliates
<https://substack.com/redirect/b96a82c8-1731-4dbe-aa9a-56e08c6498fa?r=3zjg0>,
alongside others she had asked to join, including Iona Italia
<https://substack.com/redirect/de198318-1e33-4e2e-bc11-d1043a077db8?r=3zjg0>,
Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Steven Pinker, Ayaan Hirsi Ali
<https://substack.com/redirect/16de3967-d672-43b4-b33c-093045076c85?r=3zjg0>,
Erec Smith
<https://substack.com/redirect/d1d73b4b-498a-458d-8f65-141c929072b8?r=3zjg0>,
Eric Kaufmann, Jonathan Church, Lee Jussim
<https://substack.com/redirect/94b959d6-8053-4b8b-b15e-b0988958cae6?r=3zjg0>,
Ayishat Akanb
<https://substack.com/redirect/972b658d-2ed2-4c1b-bf16-a93cebaff7e8?r=3zjg0>i,
Thomas Chatterton Williams
<https://substack.com/redirect/996be673-be02-4493-a5fb-0d3656abc204?r=3zjg0>,
John McWhorter
<https://substack.com/redirect/f7cec234-3801-4b57-8e27-e6eba7761fce?r=3zjg0>,
Glenn Loury
<https://substack.com/redirect/58c55e6f-8649-4c36-874d-c9a2e4705234?r=3zjg0>,
Peter Boghossian, Jennifer Friend
<https://substack.com/redirect/f5a84a38-43bd-436e-b9f5-4db696f8ce67?r=3zjg0>,
and several others.

As an Academic Affiliate, during the first year, I was handed a small
caseload in which I advised people who came to Counterweight looking for
advice on how to handle difficult situations in their workplaces or
communities after extreme identity-based ideologies were formally installed
throughout their organizations causing division and open hostility.
Throughout this work, my advice has mostly involved providing information
about the ideologies themselves and helping the “client” find the right
wording to advocate for symmetrical conversations in their workplaces where
people can learn to “speaking across” so that they don’t feel they have to
“speak out”.

But this was hard work, and the organization was getting a lot of
distressing messages from people across the English-speaking world, so some
of Counterweight’s staff had to take a step back and figure out how to
proceed in a universe that was fast becoming ideologically entrenched with
almost no end in sight. Helen herself advised me on a Zoom call in the
winter of 2021 to step back from my own advocacy for more humane approaches
to inclusion in the workplace, saying “I’m afraid, Steven, that America is
lost for now.”

And she was right.

If the detailed description of some of the beliefs and practices laid out
in Erec Smith’s Free Black Thought’s Substack piece Six Unsettling Features
of DEI in K-12
<https://substack.com/redirect/a5621f67-3bf6-4c44-aa0d-b07f92e9efc9?r=3zjg0>
doesn’t offer a chilling enough glimpse into where we are finding ourselves
in the current cultural zeitgeist, then hopefully we might be persuaded by
the writings of Frances Lee, a self-identified transgender nonbinary Asian
“intersectional activist” and cultural studies doctoral candidate, who
describes the atmosphere of fear and worry that has emerged in recent years
in activist spaces (and activist workplaces) that focus on diversity and
inclusion in dehumanizing ways.

In “No Justice Without Love: Why Activism Must Be More Generous”
<https://substack.com/redirect/d885e184-b62d-45bf-9e27-c826dfea8b86?r=3zjg0>,
they write:

“After publishing an essay
<https://substack.com/redirect/453fa6cd-1e95-4d6d-8546-a5b8ac9f578e?r=3zjg0> in
YES! Magazine about this anxiety I received countless letters from readers
around the world expressing similar stories. Many of them identified as
*former* activists and leftists, having been pushed out of activist spaces
for ‘not being radical enough’ or ‘being too privileged.’

Some readers relayed that they wept with relief to read that they weren’t
the only ones feeling utterly ostracized… Readers who identified as having
privilege expressed feeling turned off by the ways they had to perform
unquestioning allyship to marginalized people and respond to the guilt by
shrinking themselves into nothingness.”

This is something I witnessed as a caseworker for Counterweight and also as
a member of a private Heterodox Academy email group for “cancelled'“
professors who have made the smallest of errors that only ran afoul not of
any objectively moral code, but of an extreme ideology’s most recently
designed orthodoxy. Some of these professors are quite well-known, and more
than a few of their cases are in court, with some having settled
financially with their institutions for some pretty outrageous acts in the
name of high ideals.

I have been writing about this topic for a few years now in various places,
and most recently on the Ground Experience Substack page in the “All We Are”
<https://substack.com/redirect/6bba7af5-a5f4-4c93-8407-525c52c45d8f?r=3zjg0>
series of essays. In many ways, what has been emerging in these movements
runs counter to the principles I’ve outlined in my website, Support Your
Mission
<https://substack.com/redirect/075621d5-3482-4062-81df-8ef104fde5ea?r=3zjg0>,
which explores what I call the Three Supports for Community and
Organizational Development
<https://substack.com/redirect/a0e4de99-5707-49e1-ba41-cbfcf46db8d9?r=3zjg0>,
which includes building agency
<https://substack.com/redirect/fc9ead16-d413-41a0-903f-9dc9acfaac1f?r=3zjg0>
in those closest to the action, designing a mission-based environment
<https://substack.com/redirect/d3d26f17-c439-4f87-ab58-ab07bbc680e0?r=3zjg0>,
and nurturing a culture of inquiry and open exchange
<https://substack.com/redirect/ac8eadca-c1de-4168-a9ee-deea6a1e0125?r=3zjg0>.
The great majority of DEI trainings today foster a more authoritarian
approach which emphasizes ideological conformity and close-minded
opposition to all questioning.

For a more immersive experience of how these types of atmospheres can
manifest in an organization and why it is absolutely crucial for us to find
alternative approaches to diversity and inclusion that are more
compassionate and empirically based (rather than ideologically based), I
highly recommend Benjamin A. Boyce’s documentary series on the 2017
meltdown of Evergreen State College.
<https://substack.com/redirect/d885e184-b62d-45bf-9e27-c826dfea8b86?r=3zjg0>*Counterweight
Shifts to Depolarization as Central Mission*

Fortunately, many of us are learning to adjust to the times and are
continuing to evolve in our perspectives and in advocacy.

After nurturing the mission for two years and desiring a break from public
life, Pluckrose stepped down from Counterweight in 2021, and handed the
reigns to a new team of energetic social entrepreneurs
<https://substack.com/redirect/30bc2a25-bdb6-43ff-8f2a-ba331d81ae91?r=3zjg0>,
Laura Walker-Beaven, Jennifer Friend, and Harriet Terrill. Since this
transition, the organization’s mission
<https://substack.com/redirect/45084327-5747-4b00-ba99-928acc2c20af?r=3zjg0>
has evolved even further, and Counterweight’s main focus now is to discover
and promote ways to reduce the political polarization that has been growing
in our society, including our political parties, social media spaces,
workplaces, and local communities.

In the mission statement, Counterweight identifies “political polarization”
as “the meta-problem” we must all work collectively to resolve—a mission
similar to Braver Angels
<https://substack.com/redirect/f314cd3b-598a-48cb-b85b-72c2bf499215?r=3zjg0>,
the Foundation Against Intolerance and Racism
<https://substack.com/redirect/566b6759-12c0-42da-a9e2-80c081681d8d?r=3zjg0>
(F.A.I.R.), the Protopia Lab
<https://substack.com/redirect/6386aafc-d62c-40d9-879e-7989a8cb92c1?r=3zjg0>,
and others.

“Division between different political and ideological factions is making it
almost impossible for us to agree not only on the solutions to these
problems but on the nature of the problems themselves. In fact, it has even
become difficult for us to agree on the nature of reality. This is why at
Counterweight, we believe political polarisation is the meta-problem we
must resolve so we can protect liberal democracy and ensure we have the
capability to address all of the other threats we face.”

Although I don’t explicitly address political polarization in my talk at
the Counterweight Conference, I do talk about an important “fundamental”
that I believe can contribute to depolarization on any scale: humility and
“the willingness to be wrong” in front of others.

In the talk, I made the choice to speak plainly in a less academic way,
noting that I wanted to leave the more complex ideas and higher-level
conceptualizing to the other presenters, as many of their ideas are a
direct influence on my own, and I wanted them to speak for themselves. In
fact two of the presenters I personally recruited for the conference have
had a direct influence on my own thinking around racial depolarization:
George Yancey and Christine Louis Dit Sully. This summer, I had just read
both of their recent books, Yancey’s “Beyond Racial Division”
<https://substack.com/redirect/989ac01a-8dd4-4f6d-99f6-2b08075cfa62?r=3zjg0>
and Dit Sully’s “Transcending Racial Divisions”
<https://substack.com/redirect/bcdf9bb3-7720-4d36-b09d-7002132bcf2d?r=3zjg0>.
I found both of their books very useful for different reasons. Yancey’s
book offers a much-needed “middle path” that doesn’t reject the very real
challenges faced by people of color in Western societies (which Yancey
calls the colorblind approach) or over-indulge in hatred, hostility, and
identity-based separateness (which is deftly called ideological
antiracism). And Dit Sully’s book offers a well-researched intricate
journey into the history of racialism, race theories and their damaging
impact on societies in the past and present.

In fact, I was so inspired by these writings that I recruited both of them
to present at the Counterweight Conference. To my great delight, the
conferences organizers accepted their late entries into the conference
lineup, and at the time of this writing they both informed me that they
have completed the recording of their talks.
<https://substack.com/redirect/6e19de45-853e-4f6e-b2cf-7e359f8c78dd?r=3zjg0>
*How the Depolarization Movement Is Influencing My Work at a Minority
Serving Institution*

The writings of George Yancey, Christine Louis Dit Sully, and the writings
of others at the conference, including Erec Smith, Angel Eduardo, Ian Rowe,
Roland Fryer, Greg Thomas have provided much-needed inspiration for me in
my work at a college that serves mostly underserved populations. As the
chair of the Faculty Development Committee at the Benjamin Franklin
Cummings Institute of Technology
<https://substack.com/redirect/04edb3f6-5129-4e82-b50e-fd9b6519db6f?r=3zjg0>,
I’ve been charged with the responsibility to help organize trainings around
diversity and inclusion, and workshops around teaching strategies that can
increase access to learning for students with disabilities. Additionally, I
have been working with a specialist in trauma on a series of workshops on
the creation of trauma-informed environments. So, inclusion and empathy for
human beings is on the very top of my list of priorities in my professional
life. Thus, a conference like this one could not have been better timed.

It’s quite fascinating to be teaching and leading committees at a college
that was founded by Benjamin Franklin. Franklin, one of the most famous
Founding Fathers and one of only six people who signed both the Declaration
of Independence and the United States Constitution bequeathed a sizable sum
of his inheritance to the City of Boston to create a technology institute
for working tradesmen. With matching funds from Andrew Carnegie and the
implementation of a sophisticated investment scheme that Franklin imposed
upon the endowment, the Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology was
founded in 1908.

It’s important to acknowledge that at the time he created this endowment,
Franklin stipulated that it was white workers who would be the
beneficiaries of his estate. And now, nearly a century and a quarter after
its founding, this very same institute is not only led by the first Black
woman president in its history
<https://substack.com/redirect/f9522c4e-1eb8-463f-9e08-9a75ed24e5f3?r=3zjg0>
but serves more than 74 per cent students of color—and is officially
designated by the U.S. Office of Civil Rights as a Minority Serving
Institution (MSI)
<https://substack.com/redirect/395758c7-d527-4a32-be2d-6b0829f2a123?r=3zjg0>
.

In a sense, we have an opportunity at the college to honor both the
traditionally celebrated way-showers from our country’s history (in this
case the legacy of Benjamin Franklin, a person of European-American origin)
and to forge a path forward
<https://substack.com/redirect/ff7ab850-a44f-4f8a-a050-e49a4ece2584?r=3zjg0>
for Black and brown workers and industry pioneers in the multiple and
greatly-diversifying fields of technology that Franklin himself could not
have dreamed of.

Thus, we have an opportunity at the college to honor both past and future
legacies by experimenting with high-resolution, productive, fair, and even
healing approaches to increasing the diversity of the workforce and
building an inclusive environment on the scale of the college, the city it
serves, and even entire fields of technology.

And that’s what the Counterweight Conference was created for.
*Details About the Counterweight Conference*

The conference is an international virtual gathering of educators,
scholars, thought leaders, public policy advocates, social workers, and
human rights activists who are working to forge a new, more productive path
for building a fair and inclusive society, which includes pathways for
building fair and inclusive workplaces.

In the press release announcing the event, the organizers of the conference
describe the surrounding circumstances that have made such a conference
necessary:

“In the past few years, companies and employees have felt increasing
pressure to engage with D&I initiative. Some programmes offer useful
insights into how we can create more inclusive workplaces. Too often,
though, the ways in which people approach D&I come from ideological
foundations that are divisive and sectarian in nature. In addition to this,
companies continue to spend large sums of money on D&I trainings that
simply aren't effective
<https://substack.com/redirect/18703925-5001-47c1-933c-e748b3063e76?r=3zjg0>.
At Counterweight, we think that D&I is important, but we worry that these
ideological and identitarian approaches flatten us as individuals,
stripping us of our complexity and nuance. So, we started asking a lot of
questions…

In light of these developments, they further ask:

   -

   *What would a liberal approach to D&I look like? *
   -

   *How can we tackle discrimination and racism through a unifying lens? Do
   these approaches already exist? *
   -

   *Is there a more unifying way to tackle discrimination and racism than
   the divisive tactics of many mainstream D&I programmes?*

These are very good questions. As I have already explored in my essay on
the dangers of divisive and ideology-based diversity and inclusion trainings
<https://substack.com/redirect/764c6e5e-078a-4679-ae05-b700062de048?r=3zjg0>,
there are many negative consequences for the bottom line of the
organization’s mission and for the relationships that we count on to
deliver the services that the organization was set up for. This is true for
just about every type of organization, whether it is for-profit or
non-profit, which is why we need to find alternative models.

The alternative models presented by the many speakers at the conference all
fall under the larger umbrella of what Counterweight is calling “liberal
democracy”. It’s important to note that Counterweight is a British
non-profit, and so some of the terminology (and spelling!) will be British
in flavor. It’s for this reason that I mentioned during my interview with
Lauren Walker-Beaven that she might want to add a brief description of the
word “liberal” which has a different meaning for Americans and perhaps
other English-speaking countries. Here is what they came up with for the
conference description page
<https://substack.com/redirect/671dc066-5e5b-4354-8553-c7e690f93180?r=3zjg0>
:

We use the term 'liberal' to refer to all that is aligned with liberalism,
rather than the newer US-meaning of the term connoting left-wing politics.
Counterweight is a non-partisan organisation that believes that the
binaries of left and right wing politics do little to help the polarised,
sectarian world we now find ourselves in. We believe that universal liberal
values such as tolerance, critical thinking, individualism and freedom are
key to eliminating discrimination and racism. Find out more about
Counterweight's mission and values here
<https://substack.com/redirect/a1576de4-298c-4bc8-a65f-81bba3bdeda6?r=3zjg0>
!

These are values I can get behind, and I’m honored to have been invited. If
any readers are interested in seeing my talk, please click on *this link
<https://substack.com/redirect/bc660815-a59a-47f2-b92c-6cf62e0e2139?r=3zjg0>*.
The talk is taking place at 3pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

Hope to see you all there.
*More Information about the Conference*

Below is some more information about the conference.
<https://substack.com/redirect/0d5cfada-f044-4af7-8aa9-ee6ecc52e7f2?r=3zjg0>

*CONFERENCE PRESENTERS:* Jennifer Richmond, Laura Walker-Beaven, Harriet,
Terril, Ian Rowe, Eric Kaufmann, Winkfield Twyman, Amiel Handelsman, Will
Reusch, Mike Bowen, Wenyuan Wu, Joe Nalvan, Beth Feeley, Mike Yates, Jake
Mackey & Mike Major, Isobel Marston & James E. Petts, Angel Eduardo, Ellie
Avishai, Val Thomas, Erec S Smith, Rio Veradonir, Brandi Shufutinsky,
Sheena Mason, Dina McMillan, Greg Thomas
<https://substack.com/redirect/8e392e1b-b8cb-4586-b646-58c4917ac3f0?r=3zjg0>,
Jonathan Church & Kai Whiting, Zara Qureshi, Ye Zhang Pogue, Zander Geig,
Mike Yates, Christine Louis, Dit Sully, Mark Palmer, George Yancey, Lyell
Asher, Steven J. Lawrence, Amna Khalid & Jeff Snyder, Simon Fanshawe, Jason
Littlefield, and Roland Fryer.

PRIMARY SPONSORS: Free Black Thought, National Association of Scholars,
Foundation Against Intolerance and Racism, Institute for Liberal Values,
Jewish Institute for Liberal Values
*Counterweight Conference Press Release**Tackling discrimination through
unity:**The Counterweight Conference on Liberal Approaches to Diversity and
Inclusion*

cw.heysummit.com
<https://substack.com/redirect/287c89b8-4462-41fd-a31e-b6694c9c404c?r=3zjg0>

>From the 22nd-25th September, Counterweight will be hosting the online
Counterweight Conference on Liberal Approaches to Diversity and Inclusion,
featuring pre-recorded talks from over 40 experts.

In the past few years, companies and employees have felt increasing
pressure to engage with D&I initiative. Some programmes offer useful
insights into how we can create more inclusive workplaces. Too often,
though, the ways in which people approach D&I come from ideological
foundations that are divisive and sectarian in nature. In addition to this,
companies continue to spend large sums of money on D&I trainings that
simply aren't effective
<https://substack.com/redirect/18703925-5001-47c1-933c-e748b3063e76?r=3zjg0>.
At Counterweight, we think that D&I is important, but we worry that these
ideological and identitarian approaches flatten us as individuals,
stripping us of our complexity and nuance. So, we started asking a lot of
questions…

What would a liberal approach to D&I look like? How can we tackle
discrimination and racism through a unifying lens? Do these approaches
already exist? Is there a more unifying way to tackle discrimination and
racism than the divisive tactics of many mainstream D&I programmes?

Throughout the conference, we'll hear from experts in the field of D&I who
can answer some of these questions. We hope that you'll come away with an
understanding of how important D&I is and how we can approach it in a way
that values unity, critical thinking and liberalism.

We believe that D&I is for everyone: individuals, small businesses,
community groups, NGOs or big companies alike. For this reason, we will be
making the event available for free (for a limited period of time).
All-access passes to the event are available for £50. Get your tickets
here:

https://cw.heysummit.com



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