Diversity
Diversity refers to all aspects of human difference, social identities, and social group differences, including but not limited to race, ethnicity, creed, color, sex, gender, gender identity, sexual identity, socio-economic status, language, culture, national origin, religion/spirituality, age, (dis)ability, military/veteran status, political perspective, and associational preferences
Inclusion
Inclusion refers to a campus community where all members are and feel respected, have a sense of belonging, and are able to participate and achieve to their potential. While diversity is essential, it is not sufficient. An institution can be both diverse and non-inclusive at the same time, thus a sustained practice of creating inclusive environments is necessary for success.
Equity
Equity refers to fair and just practices and policies that ensure all campus community members can thrive. Equity is different than equality in that equality implies treating everyone as if their experiences are exactly the same. Being equitable means acknowledging and addressing structural inequalities — historic and current — that advantage some and disadvantage others. Equal treatment results in equity only if everyone starts with equal access to opportunities.
Resources to Review
- Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics (LEAP)
- Seeding Change: A Center for Asian American Movement Building
- NAACP
- National Urban League
- NBC Black
- Black America Web
- Immigrants Rising
- United We Dream
- America Needs You (ANY)
- I’m First
- Center for First-Generation Student Success
- Excelencia in Education
- National Council of La Raza
- National Center for Transgender Equality
- PFLAG
- National LGBTQ Task Force