Hi everyone, I've been on the TCLA as a guest viewer for about a year now, long enough to see the discussions around diversity and what law firms can be doing quite repeatedly. As suggested by moderators, I have created a new thread to support the D&I/Representation discussion that was taking place on the Vacation Scheme thread. I will post the message I posted here, I am really keen on knowing what criteria people use when judging whether or not a VS, for example, is representative. Also, happy to have a discussion around any of the points I've made as I'm aware some people reacted negatively to this message.
Why is it a shock to the system that Slaughter's vacation scheme consisted predominantly of white students, especially considering that white people account for roughly 80% of the UK population? I think we can have a legitimate conversation regarding representation, but I'm keen to understand what a perfectly representative vacation scheme, in your opinion, would have looked like. I think this conversation will only be meaningful if we define the metric by which we judge representation. If the metric is the general UK population, then having a VS consisting of over 50% white students is a perfectly representative one. If the metric is London, which has a 36% white population, then we can begin to say that white students on the VS are over-represented. In any case, there is still the question of why a VS demographic should be artificially made to represent a wider population.
Edit: In response to the moderator comment, they're right - my 36% stat only accounts for the White Brit population, the general White population in London could be anything near 50%, but my overarching point still stands.
Moderator - statistics relating to the White population of London are incorrect and only factor in the 'White British' population of London.
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