Rethinking DEI for Europe | Laurent Muzellec & Olamide Obadina | TEDxTrinityCollegeDublin
Around the world, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion—DEI—has become the dominant framework for addressing fairness and representation. Yet DEI was born in a very specific context: the American civil rights movement and the United States’ unique racial history. Today, that same framework is facing unprecedented pushback in its country of origin. Nearly half of American voters supported an openly anti-DEI presidential candidate, and major corporations are downsizing or abandoning DEI departments. What was meant to promote inclusion has paradoxically become a source of division, antagonising large segments of society and failing to generate broad-based legitimacy. Despite this backlash, Europe has rapidly imported DEI language, tools, and assumptions—with little questioning of whether they fit our cultural traditions, institutional systems, or social realities. Europe’s universalist heritage, from Enlightenment humanism to the post-war integration project, emphasises shared citizenship and common humanity over identity-based categorisation.This offers an opportunity: rather than adopting a framework that is losing traction in the U.S., Europe can develop its own model for social cohesion. In this talk, we introduce EUP: Equity, Unity and Pluralism a framework that aligns with European values while addressing the shortcomings of DEI. EUP preserves individual freedoms, promotes fairness without enforcing equal outcomes, and rebuilds civic unity at a time of growing societal fragmentation. It provides a constructive, context-appropriate alternative that could become a European standard—other continents should similarly adapt the DEI framework to their own histories and cultural foundations. This talk reframes the debate and offers a hopeful path forward for a cohesive European future. Laurent Muzellec is the Dean of Trinity Business School at Trinity College Dublin and a scholar whose work explores digital transformation. As Dean, he has overseen initiatives promoting fairness and transparency within a diverse academic community, giving him practical insight into how inclusion is implemented on the ground. He is a keen advocate for access programs based on socio-economic criteria such as the Trinity Access Program. Having lived and worked in the USA and multiple European contexts, Muzellec has a background in political science. This vantage point informs his argument that Europe needs its own approach to social cohesion, rooted in its universalist traditions and civic values.
Olamide is a Trinity First Class Global Business graduate, DEI researcher, and emerging voice on entrepreneurship, equity, and systems change. She is a DEI Laidlaw Scholar and a JP McManus All Ireland Scholar. Much of her work is shaped by a curiosity about who our systems are designed to serve…and who they leave behind. Olamide explores how entrepreneurship shape access to opportunity. Through research, consulting, and leadership roles, she has examined the often-invisible structures behind female leadership, access to capital, and network advantage and how these forces quietly determine outcomes. Her work challenges traditional diversity approaches, focusing on redesign over representation, showing that inclusion requires new frameworks, clearer metrics, and honest conversations about power. She is deeply involved in community-building and mentorship. Through research and storytelling, Olamide argues that change happens when systems are redesigned, not merely diversified.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx Receive SMS online on sms24.me
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