@q7+1jkeqtpej
I attended a talk at 3M many years ago on unconscious bias from an external speaker, and the punchline they ended with was more or less, "so now that we're aware of this human cognitive phenomenon, let's all try to keep it front of mind." I was kind of stunned. "Unconscious" is literally in the name.
I'm into behavioral psychology/economics (Gladwell, Ariely, Kahneman) and had a position I could leverage at the time, so I reached out to a VP or director level HR contact, asking why 3M doesn't take the scientific approach: instead of just "trying harder," why not do exactly what you said? Make resumes blind, withhold names until the interview process, etc. This was inspired by reading about blind auditions for females orchestras, which certainly did sound to be discriminated against. After they implemented curtains, way more females gained chairs.
I also put the suggestion forth to the Chief Diversity officer at the time. The response was that going blind might remove protective measures already in place (I can't remember specifics, but e.g. a requirement to interview at least one female for a role).
I feel torn about it. I really liked the idea, and thought that if 3M published such a practice, it could set a high bar among peers by taking the route of removing the opportunity to have bias in the first place. It follows the science. It could also result in less hiring in the demographics they want to boost. Seems we'll never know
This topic is very complex and I have no easy answers. I think resume studies are worth looking into for those who think discrimination is just a thing of the past. I also don't know if it's as simple as "since civil rights we're all on equal footing now." That said, quota based hiring strikes me as treating minorities like a resource (every big company is proclaiming their DEI targets, but the technical population doesn't look like the general population, so many of them will simply fail).
I'd feel a lot better if 3M was investing in root causes, but that is a way more involved and slow journey. Either way, claiming this as a core part of one's identity/mission and changing it to gain the favor of an administration is hard to feel proud of from either side of the aisle.