Anti-DEI Backlash: Creating Legally Defensible Workplace Metrics
$75
Credits in
1.00 General
Practice Areas:
Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion, Other, Paralegal
About
This Course
Corporations may approach diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives via more analytically driven recruitment and retention efforts that employ indirect, race neutral, proxy measures to build a diverse workforce while avoiding legal challenges of discrimination. This assessment considers how anti-bias training practices and promotion policies to senior executive or board positions might satisfy measurable DEI outcomes without implementing diversity quotas or triggering an anti-DEI backlash from employees. Ultimately, the intent is to survive the strict scrutiny commands of the Equal Protection Clause and thereby avoid “pernicious stereotype[s]” or “race . . . used as a negative.”
The challenges corporations must overcome to develop legally defensible DEI metrics and goals that satisfy the Supreme Court’s recent call for “metric[s] of meaningful representation” that are not based upon “proportional representation” or “racial balancing” while still preserving the litigation shield to claims of discrimination and attaining measurable DEI goals. This issue is timely given calls for enhanced corporate disclosure legislation in tune with the SEC’s approval in August 2021 of a diversity disclosures mandate for boards of Nasdaq-listed companies, along with the ongoing litigation challenging those rules in Alliance for Fair Board Recruitment, National Center for Public Policy Research v. SEC, 2024 U.S. App. LEXIS 3805.
Attorneys at any level who seek greater clarity on how to best serve legally mindful and socially responsible corporations that wish to prioritize progress on DEI goals without alienating segments of the workforce or engaging in mere virtue signaling. This includes preserving the litigation shield of corporate clients from claims of either discrimination based on Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 or concerns of reverse discrimination based on the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.
Learning Objectives:
- Introduce core concepts in the diversity, equity, and inclusion DEI space such as equality versus equity, opinion or belief formation, stereotypes versus prejudice and discrimination.
- Canvass recent legal developments in DEI at the federal and state levels in the educational context to the extent they are precursors of or predictors for ongoing legal developments in the corporate context.
- Explore the possible reasons for inefficacy of DEI trainings and elusiveness of longitudinal goals to shift corporate culture and achieve greater diversity in the workplace.
Production Date: 8/31/2025 | Closed captioning (CC) available
About the Presenters
Dr. Franklin Lebo, Esq.
Emory Law
Practice Area: Environmental Law (+ 2 other areas)
Dr. Franklin B. Lebo, Esq. is an Assistant Teaching Professor and Director of Academic Excellence at Emory Law where he focuses, inter alia, on preparing students for success on the Georgia Bar Exam. Franklin previously served multiple experiential learning programs at Emory Law including the Externship and Professionalism Programs along with the Environmental and Natural Resources Law Program and Barton Child Law and Policy Center.Before joining Emory University, from 2017-2022, Franklin served as an Assistant Professor and Co-Director of Baldwin Wallace University's Sustainability Program. He is the author of BW’s Sustainability Tracking, Assessment & Rating System (STARS) reports in 2019 and 2022 and ...
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