Bias and discrimination are everywhere. It's something we as a society are generally trying to improve. But when it comes to solutions, there is nuance in terms of cultural and social context, personal perceptions, and privilege that can complicate matters.
Join us as we speak with Raksha Kumar, an award-winning journalist and documentary filmmaker with a focus on land, forest, and human rights issues. We speak about Raksha's investigative work into the layered and complex issues of caste and sexism in India's tech industry, and elsewhere too.
About Raksha Kumar
Raksha Kumar is an award-winning journalist, with a focus on land and forest rights. Her work highlights human rights abuses by the State, thereby holding the powerful to account. Since 2011, she has reported from twelve countries across the world and a hundred districts in India for The New York Times, BBC, The Guardian, Foreign Policy, among others. Additionally, Kumar studied media freedoms in India in great detail and wrote reports for the Committee to Protect Journalists, the International Federation of Journalists, and PEN International.
Raksha graduated from the Journalism School, Columbia University, and holds a Post Graduate Diploma in Human Rights Law. She is also a documentary filmmaker and a Chevening Fellow and has been awarded a Fulbright Scholarship for Leadership Development.
Show Notes (link)
(00:02:11) Raksha's focus on human rights in journalism.
(00:02:39) People are interesting, and each person matters.
(00:05:03) The impetus for writing about sexism in India's tech industry.
(00:05:11) Writing about caste in India.
(00:05:47) India's caste system.
(00:06:33) A court case in the US raising outside awareness to caste discrimination.
(00:07:08) Equality Labs.
(00:07:35) The case was covered in India, but there was no discourse around caste in the Indian tech industry.
(00:09:22) When discrimination was raised in the investigation, gender kept coming up.
(00:10:24) Everyone talks about gender discrimination in tech. What makes India different?
(00:12:40) "Tech came with a promise of a flatter world."
(00:13:12) The privilege of being blind to discrimination.
(00:14:09) The implicit threat to remain silent for fear of repercussion.
(00:15:14) The varied reasons for remaining silent, and the individual interpretations of discrimination.
(00:16:52) Privilege and discrimination are not mutually exclusive.
(00:18:19) Awareness of our individual privileges and the affect of our intersectionality.
(00:20:50) Observations: There hasn't been any research in caste discrimination in the Indian tech sector, and the more you delve into gender discrimination the more layers there are to investigate.
(00:23:56) The drivers behind a high percentage of women in tech in India.
(00:25:03) An open economy and upward mobility.
(00:28:45) The subconscious awareness of your career 'expiry' as a woman.
(00:29:41) The two-body problem in a different context.
(00:30:57) The issues aren't unique to tech, but the way they manifest can be.
(00:32:40) Intense, and potentially exploitative, work environments.
(00:32:51) Wrong paper, I meant: Becker, SO., Fernandes, A., Weichselbaumer, D., 'Discrimination in hiring based on potential and realized fertility: Evidence from a large-scale field experiment', Labour Economics, vol 59, 2019, pp 139-152.
(00:34:10) What makes some of these issues uniquely tech.
(00:37:22) Women's visibility.
(00:38:56) The support structure around women and careers.
(00:41:06) The need for bi-directional support.
(00:43:04) Do you know how much work it takes to make something look...
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