Website Cookies

We use cookies to make your experience better. Learn more on how here

Accept

Why Inclusive Leadership Matters Now More Than Ever

Why is inclusive leadership so urgent right now?


Because the world has changed—and not always for the better.

Our book Simplifying Inclusive Leadership explores both the moral and business case for inclusive leadership. But it also addresses a harder truth: even with progress in policy and awareness, systemic inequality persists—and in many places, it’s regressing.


The Moral Case: A Matter of Justice

Equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) is about more than metrics. It’s about human dignity.

From civil rights and decolonisation to Black Lives Matter and #MeToo, inclusion has always been a moral imperative—rooted in fairness, safety, and shared humanity.

Yet the numbers tell a sobering story:

  • Women are 42% of the global workforce but just 28% of managers.
  • Black and Hispanic women in the US earn only 70% and 65%, respectively, of white men’s salaries.
  • Discrimination—racial, age-based, religious, gendered—remains pervasive worldwide.

Progress has not been linear. In fact, post-COVID, we’ve seen a dangerous anti-EDI backlash, especially in political discourse. From LGBTQ+ rights to positive action, the progress we’ve made is increasingly under fire.


The Business Case Still Stands

Yes, inclusion is also good for business:

  • It fuels innovation.
  • It improves decision-making.
  • It increases engagement and performance.

But that’s not the whole story. When we only frame EDI as a strategic advantage, we risk missing the point.


Now More Than Ever, We Need Inclusive Leadership

Crises expose inequality—and deepen it.
If we want organisations that don’t just survive, but thrive with integrity, we need leaders who:

  • Know how to centre inclusion, not sideline it.
  • Ground their efforts in justice, not just outcomes.
  • Hold moral clarity, even when it’s not politically convenient.

This is the leadership challenge of our time.

Blogs

The evolution of implicit bias: what leaders need to know

What if one of the biggest debates in inclusion has been built on asking the wrong question?For years, discussions about implicit bias have often focused on whether people consciously hold prejudiced attitudes. Yet a major 2026 review by B. Keith Payne, published in the Annual Review of Psychology, suggests the science has moved well beyond that debate....
READ POST
Blogs

Microaggressions are not just individual acts. They are shaped by culture.

When conversations about microaggressions emerge, attention often focuses on the individuals involved. Was harm intended? Was someone being overly sensitive? Did the person mean what was perceived?...
READ POST
Blogs

When visibility becomes vulnerability: the hidden cost of speaking up online

Based on Farley et al.’s (2026) scoping review in Behavioral Sciences, one of the fastest growing yet least discussed inclusion challenges may be happening outside the workplace itself....
READ POST

Copyright © 2024 Inclusive Leadership

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply

Web Design by Yellowball