LeadershipHQ Magazine June 2015 2nd Edition | Page 6

Apply that analogy to the traditional, hierarchical and cultural male hegemony; how does it pass on its ‘genetic material’? What we think we know about the world is constituted through the ways in which we engage with the world. However, narratives arrest meaning; they tend to control and coerce conformity to an existing order. The work being undertaken by the organisation I keep referring to has the potential to do something remarkable – in a small country that is remarkable; New Zealand is proud of a heritage that saw it become the first country in the world where women could vote on equal terms with men. Ahead, as the reality to engage and employ more women unfolds, there is uncertainty, ambiguity, vulnerability and strangeness to be embraced. Professor Sebastian Reiche showed recent data suggesting the diversity issue isn’t improving. The World Economic Forum calculates a decrease in the gender gap by an average of 4% in the past 9 years. This figure predicts complete gender equality by 2095 (when I’ll be 125 years old!). Distinguished feminist international relations theorist, J.Ann Tickner wrote back in 2004 that, “In today’s world of about 190 states, less than 1 percent of presidents or prime ministers are women.” Combined with the World Economic Forum figures, Reiche poses cogently: “are we doing something wrong, or just not enough?” Here’s an analogy that helps me get comfortable with something difficult: a horse refusing to step onto a horse float. It’s kicking up a fuss, offering resistance, fighting against the idea, and doing anything to avoid going onto the float. I’ve dealt with lots of such horses, but haven’t encountered one yet (in over a thousand with which I’ve worked) that hasn’t willingly, and of its own accord, walked onto the float and stood calmly in the end. That doesn’t mean I mightn’t meet one that defeats me in future (in which case, I’ll need to learn more about why), it just means I’m optimistic that my approach is right and what I’m trying to achieve is reasonable. Gender equality and leadership are inextricably linked; dealing with associated issues requires courage and innovation. This isn’t a bandwagon to leap on as a self-promotion exercise. If you pride yourself in thinking differently; if you pride yourself on being innovative and open-minded; if you consider yourself fair and unbiased; if you pride yourself on having the moral courage to do what’s right – then you’re probably a feminist. I’ll try to link the close of this article back to my opening paragraph. If we want ‘diverse’ organisations (because frankly that’s how we achieve the best type of resilience and ensur