Exploring the paper Kaiser, C.R., Major, B., Jurcevic, I., Dover, T.L., Brady, L.M. and Shapiro, J.R., 2013. Presumed fair: ironic effects of organizational diversity structures. Journal of personality and social psychology, 104(3), p.504.
Blog one of five, in a series by Dr Chrissi McCarthy.
Welcome to the fifth instalment of our research-to-social cycle (RSC) blogs, where we examine a research paper that has had a big impact on our thinking and explore it through a day-to-day lens.
The week ahead
Ever wondered what happens after we put an EDI (Equality, Diversity and Inclusion) policy in place? How pdo eople react? Do they care? Does it make them behave better? Could it make them behave worse?
These were the questions Kaiser et al wanted to answer and what we will look at this month in RSC5.
As we go through the week, I would encourage you to refer back to the paper. Please do read it, cite it and share it. Then tell us what you thought. Did we sum it up well? Perhaps you feel we misunderstood something or left out a key point? Let us know. Discussion is at the heart of learning.
The paper: Presumed fair: ironic effects of organizational diversity structures.
Year: 2013
Authors: Kaiser, C.R., Major, B., Jurcevic, I., Dover, T.L., Brady, L.M. and Shapiro, J.R.
Blog 1: Introducing R2SC 5
Blog 2: Why this paper matters
Blog 3: How do they know what they know (research methods)
Blog 4: What they found
Blog 5: Round up. To close the research-to-social cycle, our resident EDI outsider Natalie will review the blogs and offer her takeaways on what the research, and what we at COBE recommend to put the research into action in your workplace
What are the Research-to-Social Cycles?
Not everyone has the time or luxury to get up close with academic research in EDI, and even if they do, they might not have stumbled upon these particular papers.
So we want to bring you closer to the research we have found important by introducing you to a new research paper each month, on the third Monday of the month, with five blogs across that week.

We will discuss the research, its real-world impact, and what you can do to implement its findings. Perhaps importantly, these blogs will be written by humans rather than generative AI, so we can really understand the human element of the research and why it matters to us. (Note: I will never not be using Grammarly).
The idea behind the Research-to-Social Cycle blog series is to help bridge the research-practice gap in EDI. Currently, valuable research insights are being missed, which hinders our ability to improve our practice and our environments.
We want to help bridge that gap.
We hope you enjoy the series. Please let us know if we have successfully brought you closer to EDI research, so you can implement what is helpful in your practice.
Here is our schedule for 2025:
Published: RSC1 Jun – Blogs start here
Published: RSC2 Jul Blogs start here
Published: RSC3 Aug Blogs start here
Published: RSC4 Sept Blogs start here
This Month – RSC4 Sep
RSC6 Nov
RSC7 Dec