
"Aquel que no
esta orgulloso de su origen, no valdra nunca nada
porque empieza por despreciarse a si mismo"
~
Don
Pedro Albizu Campos.
“A person who
is not proud of their origin will not have self worth
because they begin to neglect themselves."
Cultural competence and
diversity initiatives start with the individual.
Consequently, for an organization, it needs to start
with the administration, board of directors and
management. This is an instance where the cliché "it all
starts by getting your house in order" holds true.
Cultural competence must start at home. Sustainability
of a diversity initiative depends on a systematic plan
that starts at the top of the organization and then
spills over to employees and consequently, to all
stakeholders associated with the organization. Once
cultural competence becomes an integral value in the
organization, it will be reflected in policies,
activities, structures and practice. Cultural competency
leads to valuing diversity and this leads to having an
inclusive environment. Cultural competency is a set of
skills. These skills are then rooted in all aspects of
the organization.
The
skills learned from cultural competence will have a
positive impact on the success of your business. Whether
the goal is to expand your business base, develop a
business plan or strategic plan, target a broader
customer market or develop a marketing strategy,
cultural competence skills can provide your business the
ability to serve diverse communities and adapt to
diverse environments.
While diversity and
cultural competence are intertwined, they are not the
same. For example, a work environment can be diverse but
not culturally competent. In building a healthy
organizational structure, employees must integrate
cultural competence as a value. This value must permeate
the organization at all levels, from decision making to
strategic planning to policy development. An
organization that reflects and values their ethnic and
cultural diversity will maximize productivity and work
more effectively with culturally diverse stakeholders,
clients and communities.
Cultural competence is
presented in the trainings not as a single initiative
but as an ongoing campaign. The campaign approach
encourages the participants to become stakeholders of
the process. The shortcoming of viewing diversity as an
initiative is that often the responsibility for an
initiative falls on those individuals within the
organization deemed as "experts" in the field, rather
than understanding the importance of having each person
engaging in the process of creating lasting cultural
change. The initiative approach also prevents formal and
informal leaders from emerging as champions of change. |