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"It's Not Always Possible to Live Your Life Openly or Honestly in the Same Way" - Workplace Inclusion of Lesbian and Gay Humanitarian Aid Workers in Doctors Without Borders. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored the experiences of 11 lesbian and gay humanitarian aid workers from Doctors Without Borders (MSF) regarding their workplace inclusion, focusing on their needs for authenticity and belonging in both office and field settings.
  • Findings indicated that while attitudes of colleagues and organizational inclusiveness practices influence perceived authenticity for LG workers, these factors do not fully explain variations among individuals.
  • A typology categorized participants into three groups based on how they manage their sexuality in the field, highlighting a complex "disclosure dilemma," where workers are open about their identity in the office but often conceal it in countries where homosexuality is illegal.

Article Abstract

In this exploratory study, we present findings from semi-structured interviews with 11 self-identified lesbian and gay (LG) humanitarian aid workers of Doctors without Borders (MSF). We investigate their perceptions of workplace inclusion in terms of perceived satisfaction of their needs for authenticity and belonging within two organizational settings, namely office and field. Through our combined deductive and inductive approach, based on grounded theory, we find that perceptions of their colleagues' and supervisors' attitudes and behaviors, as well as organizational inclusiveness practices play a role in LGs' perceived authenticity, but not belonging, in the workplace. However, these organization-level characteristics do not account for between-participant differences in perceived authenticity. Therefore, we inductively construct a typology of three groups, which we coined , , and , based on how LG humanitarian aid workers assess and deal with not being able to be their authentic selves when they are in the field, because homosexuality is illegal in many project countries. Conscious first-missioners are separated from the other two groups based on having gone to the field once, whereby they felt in control over the decision on how to manage their sexuality. Alternatively, authentic realists and idealistic activists alike felt they did not really have a choice in how to manage their sexuality, but handled that differently. We find the importance of one's sexuality as well as adherence to the overarching organizational mission relevant individual-level factors herein. Furthermore, we find disclosure of sexual identity to be strongly context-dependent, as participants are 'out of the closet' in the office, but go back into the closet when they enter the field, with different country contexts even leading to different decisions concerning self-disclosure, thus demonstrating the importance of careful sexual identity management. This so-called disclosure dilemma, we find, may not be merely an individual choice, but rather a shared dilemma involving multiple stakeholders, such as the organization and fellow team members. We discuss the findings' contributions to existing literature on LGs' workplace experiences and implications for future research on inclusion of sexual and other invisible minorities in the workplace.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6400840PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00320DOI Listing

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