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Anti-DEI efforts apparently hurting environmental sector

December 15, 2023

December 15, 2023

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By Astrid GalvƔn. Read at Axios.

The dwindlingĀ diversity, equity and inclusionĀ (DEI) movement appears to be slowing the diversifying of environmental organizations and foundations, according to an analysis of aĀ new report.

Why it matters: People of color in the U.S. are disproportionately affected by climate change and more likely to live in areas with higher pollution, yet white people lead most major non-governmental organizations and foundations focused on solving these issues.

Details:Ā Green 2.0, a watchdog organization that tracks diversity in the environmental sector, published itsĀ annual reportĀ based on data from 73 NGOs and 25 foundations on Wednesday. This year:

  • Only 7.6% of NGO board members and 5.3% of heads or organizations were Hispanic, according to self-reported data.
  • About 68% of heads of organizations were white, 10.5% were Asian and 9.2% were Black.
  • Of all full-time staff, nearly 12% were Hispanic, 58% white, 12.3% Black and 6.6% Asian.
  • Key takeaway: There was no increase in the number of people of color in senior staff and board positions at NGOs from 2022 to 2023. There were actually small declines in diverse employees within some racial or ethnic groups, the report found.

What they’re saying: Environmental organizations have failed to build strong pipelines of diverse workers to leadership positions, says Andres Jimenez, Green 2.0’s executive director.

  • “One of the biggest problems is not only is it hard to get people of color into the environmental sector, but it’s even harder to retain them,” Jimenez says.
  • “They’ll come into an organization and not see anybody who looks like them. That’s very discouraging.”
  • Between the lines:Ā Businesses and universities are cuttingĀ diversity programsĀ after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling overturningĀ affirmative actionĀ and amid political backlash. Lawmakers in red states have also pushed back on such programs.
  • All of this has “definitely played a role” in a slowdown of diverse hires in the environmental sector, Jimenez says.