AIBR http://www.aibr.org Registro AIBR, SSCI text/plain; charset=utf-8 TY - JOUR JO - ARIES, Anuario de Antropología Iberoamericana TI - OTHERNESS AND VOICES DURING THE HIRING PROCESS: ETHNOGRAPHIES IN THE CITY OF LONDON VL - IS - 2023 PB - Asociación AIBR, Antropólogos Iberoamericanos en Red T2 - ARIES, Anuario de Antropología Iberoamericana PY - 2023 M1 - SN - 2530-7843 UR - https://aries.aibr.org/articulo/2023/27/5075/otherness-and-voices-during-the-hiring-process-ethnographies-in-the-city-of-london DO - doi: AU - Hugo Gaggiotti A2 - A3 - A4 - A5 - A6 - A7 - SP - LA - Esp DA - 27/09/2023 KW - voice, postcolonial, performance, hiring, discrimination AB - Spanish: Discrimination and anti-diverse policies are extensively denounced and reported. What is less analysed, however, is how discrimination, inequality and anti-diverse actions are materialised in concrete organisational everyday practices. The focus of this paper is to examine if and how a different stance to equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) can be taken during a particular critical organizational event, hiring. Hiring is an organizational stance when prejudices, stereotyping and assumptions play a significant role when defining the “us” and “them”; the “similar” and the “different”.  Hence, when discriminatory decisions materialise in the form of a concrete decision: to incorporate someone into the organisation or not.The focus of the paper is to consider how, during the complex micro organizational event of hiring, recruiters and candidates construct otherness through discriminatory practices, using in particular a visual and oral interaction.Dressing, facial and body languages, colours (in particular, of the skin), sounds, odours and, crucially, accents, became elements that both recruiters and candidates use to construct themselves and the other.The paper discussed the ethnographic experiences of how otherness is constructed during the hiring exercises in financial organisations in London. English: Discrimination and anti-diverse policies are extensively denounced and reported. What is less analysed, however, is how discrimination, inequality and anti-diverse actions are materialised in concrete organisational everyday practices. The focus of this paper is to examine if and how a different stance to equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) can be taken during a particular critical organizational event, hiring. Hiring is an organizational stance when prejudices, stereotyping and assumptions play a significant role when defining the “us” and “them”; the “similar” and the “different”.  Hence, when discriminatory decisions materialise in the form of a concrete decision: to incorporate someone into the organisation or not.The focus of the paper is to consider how, during the complex micro organizational event of hiring, recruiters and candidates construct otherness through discriminatory practices, using in particular a visual and oral interaction.Dressing, facial and body languages, colours (in particular, of the skin), sounds, odours and, crucially, accents, became elements that both recruiters and candidates use to construct themselves and the other.The paper discussed the ethnographic experiences of how otherness is constructed during the hiring exercises in financial organisations in London. CR - Copyright; 2023 Asociación AIBR, Antropólogos Iberoamericanos en Red ER -