Skip to main content

Unequal academy: The struggle and challenges of token black academics in the United Kingdom.

Adisa, T. A., Gbadamosi, G. and Chang, K., 2025. Unequal academy: The struggle and challenges of token black academics in the United Kingdom. British Journal of Management. (In Press)

Full text available as:

[thumbnail of BJM - Unequal Academy.pdf]
Preview
PDF
BJM - Unequal Academy.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial.

339kB

DOI: 10.1111/1467-8551.12902

Abstract

In this study, we tackle the under-explored issue of racial inclusion for Black academics in UK universities, thus exposing the harsh reality of ‘tokenism’. We amplify the voices of these academics and thereby reveal the disturbing prevalence of tokenism within UK higher education institutions. Drawing on organizational justice theory, we leverage a mixed-methods approach (24 interviews and 201 questionnaires) to examine their lived experiences, perceptions of belonging, interpretations of fairness within academia and the roadblocks hindering their career progression. We uncover evidence of covert racism, the pressure to outperform non-Black colleagues and epistemic injustice – the invalidation of their knowledge contributions. Interestingly, work prejudice and discrimination are not found to be associated with gender or work mode but rather with citizenship status. Our respondents, all British academics, report higher fairness perceptions, while non-British academics face greater discrimination. Our findings highlight the crucial role of procedural and distributive justice in mitigating prejudice in the workplace for Black academics, underlining the importance of residency status in human resources practices. This research strengthens organizational justice theory and calls for interventions promoting racial equity within UK universities. Our research demonstrates the detrimental impact of tokenism and highlights how it perpetuates racial disadvantages and prevents Black academics from achieving true equality within their institutions.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:1045-3172
Uncontrolled Keywords:Black academics; ethnic minorities; inclusion; inequality; racial discrimination; tokenism
Group:Bournemouth University Business School
ID Code:40754
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:17 Feb 2025 16:07
Last Modified:17 Feb 2025 16:07

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

More statistics for this item...
Repository Staff Only -