Undisguised racism in Australian recruitment


Racism in recruitment is against the law but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. And it’s not always unconscious, sometimes it’s overt.

In April this year, telecommunications giant Optus came under fire for posting a job ad on employment site SEEK that noted a preference for ‘candidates who are Anglo Saxon’. The ad was swiftly removed after accusations of racism began circulating on social media.

While the union representing Optus workers described the ad as “blatantly racist”, others noted that it simply put into words the unspoken desire of many hiring managers to recruit people who look and sound just like them.

Despite many studies pointing to the business case for diversity and federal laws that prohibit discrimination on the grounds of attributes such as ethnicity, the fact remains that racist attitudes – whether unconscious or overt – influence many of the hiring decisions in companies. It manifests in different ways, from explicit racial preferences, such as in the Optus case, to overlooking applicants with non-Anglo-Saxon sounding names and coded messages in job ads, such as a requirement for ‘perfect English’.

“There’s often an assumption that people can only speak a high-level of English if they come packaged in an Anglo-Saxon body,” says Lisa Annese, CEO of Diversity Council Australia. “To be honest, this is not always the case.”

What’s in a name?

Victorian Minister for Multicultural Affairs, Robin Scott knows too well the racial preferences that can influence recruitment decisions. Scott’s wife, Shaojie, has often used the Anglicised version of her Chinese name while job hunting to avoid the potential for bias.

“What we found was that when she sent out her CV for employment opportunities, there were greater responses when she used the name ‘Jade’, which is the Anglicised version of her name,” he says.

Scott launched the Victorian government’s Recruit Smarter initiative in February last year, which aims to counter potential bias during recruitment. The program is a response to the findings of a 2009 study by academics at Australian National University, which sought to identify any labour market discrimination against ethnic minorities. Authors of the study sent out 4,000 fake job applications to Australian employers advertising for entry-level hospitality, data entry, customer service and sales jobs. They changed only the racial origin of the phoney applicants’ names. “We wanted starting-level jobs that would appear gender-neutral and jobs that didn’t rely on previous experience that might be gender-specific,” explains Alison Booth, professor of economics at ANU and one of the study’s authors.

The study showed applicants with Chinese names were least likely to be invited for an interview – just a one-in-five chance – while the chances of applicants with Anglo-Saxon names exceeded one-in-three.

Do the findings suggest hiring managers in Australia are racist?

“Yes,” says Booth. “Possibly unconsciously.”

Recruiting your reflection

Helen Green*, an HR professional with more than 20 years’ experience, says racial bias in recruitment is often explicit rather than unconscious. Green specialises in recruitment in industries such as engineering and information technology and says hiring managers often wish to recruit a specific race.

“This level of discrimination really exists in the market and it’s generally [coming from] white men of a certain age,” says Green. “They don’t want applicants who are accented, even if their English can be clearly understood. They’re like, ‘well, at least sound like me if you’re not going to look like me’.”

Green adds that ‘cultural fit’ is often used as a code for racial preference. “People often use reasons like ‘they wouldn’t be a good cultural fit’, when in fact they mean ‘we don’t want you on our team’,” she says.

“They don’t understand that people qualified for jobs today don’t always look like them anymore. White Anglo-Saxon males aren’t necessarily the ones achieving top marks in engineering, and women aren’t just doing nursing and teaching. I’ve seen roles empty for two years because they weren’t interviewing anyone other than white males or females, but generally males. ‘Cultural fit’ is often code for you must like booze and NRL.”

Annese says that while it is reasonable to expect applicants to speak a specific language, problems arise when hiring managers make decisions about someone’s English skills based of their race. “An employer might be very happy to hire a Canadian or someone with a Scottish Brogue but feel uncomfortable with an accent from Pakistan or India, even though they might be equally understood,” she says. “I think the vast majority of this is a result of bias that is unconscious and people feeling uncomfortable with things that are not familiar.”

Removing recruitment racism  

Anonymous job application procedures may assist in reducing racial bias in recruitment. “Trial removing names from CVs for jobs where this would be possible, such as at the stage before obtaining references, and don’t include photos either,” says Booth. “I think this is a good way forward.”

While Green believes blind recruitment is a valuable way of tackling racial bias in hiring practices, she says it may not go far enough. “You can remove names [from CVs] but how do you try to increase diversity when you’ve got hiring managers who just say, ‘I won’t hire anyone with overseas experience or overseas university qualifications’?,” she says.

The Victorian Government’s Recruit Smarter initiative includes trialling anonymous job applications, training in unconscious bias and education about biased language in job ads. More than 40 organisations are participating in the program, including Australia Post, Deloitte and Westpac. Scott says data from the program is currently being analysed by researchers at the Centre for Ethical Leadership and that findings are expected to be released later this year.

“I’m hopeful that we’ll have a pretty good line of sight on what has worked and what is good practice,” says Scott. “It’s not as if you’re going to completely remove biases from any process, but this is about minimising and reducing it. I think that’s got to a positive thing.”

*Name changed

A version of this article originally appeared in the August 2018 edition of HRM magazine.


Support change and improve diversity outcomes by raising awareness of conscious and unconscious bias in your organisation, with AHRI’s corporate in-house training course ‘Managing unconscious bias’.

Subscribe to receive comments
Notify me of
guest

35 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Menaka Iyengar Cooke
Menaka Iyengar Cooke
6 years ago

I have experienced both unconscious and conscious bias in the workforce despite four degrees from Australian universities and over 30 years of experience (including being a Fellow of AHRI). I am therefore not surprised by the comments in this article. While most HR managers try to do the right thing – the operational/ unit managers try to circumvent things at times by citing ‘culture’ and ‘team’ issues. That said, I think many of us are uncomfortable with anything or anyone outside our own narrow, warm, cosy sphere. So we aim to replicate ourselves to keep up the cosy, cocoon feeling,… Read more »

Noor Talpur
Noor Talpur
6 years ago

My story is like wise, I was serving as a successful HR professional in my home country overseas. First time came to Australia as a international student in 2006-2007 on Employer funded performance based scholarship, I did my degree in HR from Canberra Australia and returned back to serve my employer. Apparently, I did not felt any the invisible market discrimination at that time. Considering my experience, achievement in my HR career with previous employers, qualification in HR from Australian University and number of jobs advertised on SEEK, I became interested to pursue career in HR in Australia and applied… Read more »

Max Underhill
Max Underhill
6 years ago

If your organisation is using a system that provides a quantifiable shortlist assessment of the competence and other critical criteria then the “client” will only see short list ranking overall and against the criteria (no need for names if you wish). At the interview they will see the candidates but with quantifiable assessment of each competence and attribute it is more difficult to bias the score and if it is one interviewer that is different these scores can be questioned and or eliminated. We rarely see bias in the interviews because of the system. We

Kath
Kath
6 years ago

I don’t think it was professional to ask for such words to be put in the ad. If they had said we need employees “who have good oral and written English” then that would have been acceptable. I too have spoken with people from telecommunication and banking organisations over the phone with strong foreign accents and it can be frustrating if I cannot understand them and vice versa, so I can understand why a manager would weed out people due to their accents, which may seem unfair however managers have pressure placed on them to ensure things run smoothly and… Read more »

trackback
Basics of Human Resource Management – IBU Thing
5 years ago

[…] Muldowney 2018. Undisguised racism in Australian recruitment. URL: http://www.hrmonline.com.au/recruitment/racism-australian-recruitment/ Accessed […]

More on HRM

Undisguised racism in Australian recruitment


Racism in recruitment is against the law but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. And it’s not always unconscious, sometimes it’s overt.

In April this year, telecommunications giant Optus came under fire for posting a job ad on employment site SEEK that noted a preference for ‘candidates who are Anglo Saxon’. The ad was swiftly removed after accusations of racism began circulating on social media.

While the union representing Optus workers described the ad as “blatantly racist”, others noted that it simply put into words the unspoken desire of many hiring managers to recruit people who look and sound just like them.

Despite many studies pointing to the business case for diversity and federal laws that prohibit discrimination on the grounds of attributes such as ethnicity, the fact remains that racist attitudes – whether unconscious or overt – influence many of the hiring decisions in companies. It manifests in different ways, from explicit racial preferences, such as in the Optus case, to overlooking applicants with non-Anglo-Saxon sounding names and coded messages in job ads, such as a requirement for ‘perfect English’.

“There’s often an assumption that people can only speak a high-level of English if they come packaged in an Anglo-Saxon body,” says Lisa Annese, CEO of Diversity Council Australia. “To be honest, this is not always the case.”

What’s in a name?

Victorian Minister for Multicultural Affairs, Robin Scott knows too well the racial preferences that can influence recruitment decisions. Scott’s wife, Shaojie, has often used the Anglicised version of her Chinese name while job hunting to avoid the potential for bias.

“What we found was that when she sent out her CV for employment opportunities, there were greater responses when she used the name ‘Jade’, which is the Anglicised version of her name,” he says.

Scott launched the Victorian government’s Recruit Smarter initiative in February last year, which aims to counter potential bias during recruitment. The program is a response to the findings of a 2009 study by academics at Australian National University, which sought to identify any labour market discrimination against ethnic minorities. Authors of the study sent out 4,000 fake job applications to Australian employers advertising for entry-level hospitality, data entry, customer service and sales jobs. They changed only the racial origin of the phoney applicants’ names. “We wanted starting-level jobs that would appear gender-neutral and jobs that didn’t rely on previous experience that might be gender-specific,” explains Alison Booth, professor of economics at ANU and one of the study’s authors.

The study showed applicants with Chinese names were least likely to be invited for an interview – just a one-in-five chance – while the chances of applicants with Anglo-Saxon names exceeded one-in-three.

Do the findings suggest hiring managers in Australia are racist?

“Yes,” says Booth. “Possibly unconsciously.”

Recruiting your reflection

Helen Green*, an HR professional with more than 20 years’ experience, says racial bias in recruitment is often explicit rather than unconscious. Green specialises in recruitment in industries such as engineering and information technology and says hiring managers often wish to recruit a specific race.

“This level of discrimination really exists in the market and it’s generally [coming from] white men of a certain age,” says Green. “They don’t want applicants who are accented, even if their English can be clearly understood. They’re like, ‘well, at least sound like me if you’re not going to look like me’.”

Green adds that ‘cultural fit’ is often used as a code for racial preference. “People often use reasons like ‘they wouldn’t be a good cultural fit’, when in fact they mean ‘we don’t want you on our team’,” she says.

“They don’t understand that people qualified for jobs today don’t always look like them anymore. White Anglo-Saxon males aren’t necessarily the ones achieving top marks in engineering, and women aren’t just doing nursing and teaching. I’ve seen roles empty for two years because they weren’t interviewing anyone other than white males or females, but generally males. ‘Cultural fit’ is often code for you must like booze and NRL.”

Annese says that while it is reasonable to expect applicants to speak a specific language, problems arise when hiring managers make decisions about someone’s English skills based of their race. “An employer might be very happy to hire a Canadian or someone with a Scottish Brogue but feel uncomfortable with an accent from Pakistan or India, even though they might be equally understood,” she says. “I think the vast majority of this is a result of bias that is unconscious and people feeling uncomfortable with things that are not familiar.”

Removing recruitment racism  

Anonymous job application procedures may assist in reducing racial bias in recruitment. “Trial removing names from CVs for jobs where this would be possible, such as at the stage before obtaining references, and don’t include photos either,” says Booth. “I think this is a good way forward.”

While Green believes blind recruitment is a valuable way of tackling racial bias in hiring practices, she says it may not go far enough. “You can remove names [from CVs] but how do you try to increase diversity when you’ve got hiring managers who just say, ‘I won’t hire anyone with overseas experience or overseas university qualifications’?,” she says.

The Victorian Government’s Recruit Smarter initiative includes trialling anonymous job applications, training in unconscious bias and education about biased language in job ads. More than 40 organisations are participating in the program, including Australia Post, Deloitte and Westpac. Scott says data from the program is currently being analysed by researchers at the Centre for Ethical Leadership and that findings are expected to be released later this year.

“I’m hopeful that we’ll have a pretty good line of sight on what has worked and what is good practice,” says Scott. “It’s not as if you’re going to completely remove biases from any process, but this is about minimising and reducing it. I think that’s got to a positive thing.”

*Name changed

A version of this article originally appeared in the August 2018 edition of HRM magazine.


Support change and improve diversity outcomes by raising awareness of conscious and unconscious bias in your organisation, with AHRI’s corporate in-house training course ‘Managing unconscious bias’.

Subscribe to receive comments
Notify me of
guest

35 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Menaka Iyengar Cooke
Menaka Iyengar Cooke
6 years ago

I have experienced both unconscious and conscious bias in the workforce despite four degrees from Australian universities and over 30 years of experience (including being a Fellow of AHRI). I am therefore not surprised by the comments in this article. While most HR managers try to do the right thing – the operational/ unit managers try to circumvent things at times by citing ‘culture’ and ‘team’ issues. That said, I think many of us are uncomfortable with anything or anyone outside our own narrow, warm, cosy sphere. So we aim to replicate ourselves to keep up the cosy, cocoon feeling,… Read more »

Noor Talpur
Noor Talpur
6 years ago

My story is like wise, I was serving as a successful HR professional in my home country overseas. First time came to Australia as a international student in 2006-2007 on Employer funded performance based scholarship, I did my degree in HR from Canberra Australia and returned back to serve my employer. Apparently, I did not felt any the invisible market discrimination at that time. Considering my experience, achievement in my HR career with previous employers, qualification in HR from Australian University and number of jobs advertised on SEEK, I became interested to pursue career in HR in Australia and applied… Read more »

Max Underhill
Max Underhill
6 years ago

If your organisation is using a system that provides a quantifiable shortlist assessment of the competence and other critical criteria then the “client” will only see short list ranking overall and against the criteria (no need for names if you wish). At the interview they will see the candidates but with quantifiable assessment of each competence and attribute it is more difficult to bias the score and if it is one interviewer that is different these scores can be questioned and or eliminated. We rarely see bias in the interviews because of the system. We

Kath
Kath
6 years ago

I don’t think it was professional to ask for such words to be put in the ad. If they had said we need employees “who have good oral and written English” then that would have been acceptable. I too have spoken with people from telecommunication and banking organisations over the phone with strong foreign accents and it can be frustrating if I cannot understand them and vice versa, so I can understand why a manager would weed out people due to their accents, which may seem unfair however managers have pressure placed on them to ensure things run smoothly and… Read more »

trackback
Basics of Human Resource Management – IBU Thing
5 years ago

[…] Muldowney 2018. Undisguised racism in Australian recruitment. URL: http://www.hrmonline.com.au/recruitment/racism-australian-recruitment/ Accessed […]

More on HRM