Letter to Hugh

 

The Inclusion Initiative & a better world

Darling Hugh,

You saved me from isolation and irrelevance when we met at The Hotchkiss School in 1981. A bit of eurotrash from Madrid, raised in Dictator Franco’s traditional Spain, I was lost amid all the preppies in that Connecticut boarding school. You offered me your beautiful (like all of you) hand in friendship and I survived my oddity, with the help of our escape once a term for wild nights at Studio 54 in New York.

What I never realised till recently is how deeply you affected my life, all the way up to the present day. I thought the personal motivation for being a Diversity & Inclusion campaigner came from being a woman and an immigrant in the City. You, in fact were the springboard. Although I had guessed, it took a year for you to tell me you were gay, out of fear that I would turn away in disgust as others had. Your East Coast establishment upbringing did not help.

Only now am I aware that the horror of realising how cruelly you had been hurt and excluded has led me through the years to this week in 2020, with the launch of The Inclusion Initiative (TII) at the London School of Economics. The research centre, which I co-founded, will bring behavioural science and data together to create more inclusive cultures in the City for sustainable profits.

We are already working on a four-year project with Women in Banking and Finance, The Wisdom Council, and a number of firms ranging from BlackRock to Barclays, to evaluate the causes of gender difference in progression and then trial and evaluate solutions. And we are in talks with a number of financial and professional services companies on partnering in projects from making venture-funding more open to BAME entrepreneurs, to disrupting how new work projects are assigned and how employees are rewarded, to better measuring the link between culture and risk.

Words or acronyms like ‘data’ and ‘LGBT+’ seem so cold, and if I wrote about another project to use ‘AI’ to promote inclusion in the workplace, these terms would be meaningless to you. ‘Profitability’, however, would be a familiar word. The aim of The Inclusion Initiative is, ultimately, to create more inclusive workplaces in order to boost the bottom line, a point amply demonstrated in studies from McKinsey and others.

In a business sector dependent on innovation and collaboration, diverse voices need to be heard. The mark of a good meeting is not necessarily one filled with bonhomie and agreement, while the mark of a good Chair is to create the psychological safety to allow all present to speak up. Behavioural science teaches us that discomfort is often the prelude to learning. Discomfort was the least of my feelings as I sashayed into the school cafeteria in a pretty dress on the first Sunday in the school year, to find America’s young elite dressed for brunch in the oldest sweatshirts and jeans they could muster. Sunday best had a rather different definition in Connecticut than in the Madrid of that era.

There is a world of difference in LGBT+ rights in the developed world and in business compared to the early 1980s. The City now has its own Pride in the City organisation to promote Diversity & Inclusion. Yet only last year an openly gay candidate to be Lord Mayor of the City of London was asked in his interview process how he would prevent the role being “hijacked” by the gay community, while the US Labor Department proposed a rule cancelling an executive order banning anti-LGBT+ discrimination among federal contractors.

I last saw you, Hugh, in New York in 1988. You told me you were HIV positive and I asked what that was; its ravaging effects in the gay community had yet to be felt and chronicled in Europe, and you were ablaze with apparent health and on your way to being a successful painter. Over the next years you chronicled the AIDS era in figurative, bleak works which you described as having that ‘soft glow of brutality’ characteristic of American painters like Edward Hopper.

I called in 1995 to say I was coming over to New York again. But you had died at 32 years old of AIDS-related complications. I wish you could have lived on to find a partner, and to walk down the street hand in hand, to entertain at home and to call him your husband. The jargon of inclusion should not hide the fact that we are creating a better world.

Karina Robinson is Co-Director of The Inclusion Initiative at the LSE along with Associate Professor Grace Lordan. Hugh Auchincloss Steer’s work hangs in the Whitney Collection of American Art.

 
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