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Why Pretending You Don’t See Race or Gender Is an Obstacle to Equality

man with blindfold in front of an illustration
Photo illustration by Lisa Larson-Walker. Photo by iStock/Thinkstock.
May 23 2017
Fellow, Research, Stanford

When Christy Johnson was pregnant and working as a vice president at a tech company, a manager made some sexist comments to her. When she confronted him, he hid behind what he thought was a bulletproof shield: As the father of two daughters, he didn’t even see gender, he said. He was “gender-blind.” “I felt dismissed,” Johnson told me.

That manager was far from alone. In Johnson’s present role as the CEO and founder of the strategy consulting firm Artemis Connection, she often hears company leaders say “they're gender-blind or race-blind because of an experience they may have had growing up in a diverse community—or having a strong mom,” Johnson said.

Researcher Sharon Jank is a 2014 DARE Fellow.

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