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ANONYMIZED RECRUITING

Chosen by you, redacted by us. Tailor 26+ parameters while boosting hiring efficiency by 95% with the leading anonymization tool integrated directly into your ATS/HCM. Make fairness a reality today

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MOXIE BENEFITS

50%By 2025, 50% of organizations will use blind hiring, growing 10% annually to boost fair employment practices

TEMPLATING

MeVitae’s templating solution helps professionals standardize documents for quick, consistent candidate profile reviews, allowing focus on key qualities and candidates competencies

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MOXIE BENEFITS

80%Time saved by transforming CVs into a consistent format, removing the hassle of navigating unstructured layouts

PARSING

Revolutionize hiring with MeVitae’s parsing technology: parse CVs, cover letters, and more to make talent-focused, fair decisions powered by neuroscience-driven innovation

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MOXIE BENEFITS

90%+Accuracy in resume parsing, ensuring reliable and detailed data extraction every time
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GROWTH

Unlock your workforce's full potential. Centralize your HR data with MeVitae for smarter, data-driven decisions. Automate reporting, benchmark against industry standards, and improve workforce planning

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MOXIE BENEFITS

$100kCut costs by automating analytics, consolidating HR data, and focusing resources on strategic growth

ENTERPRISE

Streamline decision-making by unifying HR, Legal, and Finance data. Automate processes, boost efficiency, and manage people risks with strategic foresight

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MOXIE BENEFITS

30%+Increase productivity by aligning talent with strategic goals, improving team health and performance

HR PROVIDERS

Boost your HR technology by embedding MeVitae’s ethical AI under your brand. Simplify processes, reduce hiring time, and deliver tailored solutions that reflect your company’s identity.

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MOXIE BENEFITS

50%+Increase in your customers’ time-to-hire with automated parsing, redaction, and screening within your platform.
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ABOUT US

At MeVitae, we combine science and technology to eliminate barriers, mitigate risk, increase compliance, and empower growth. Together, we’re creating workplaces where everyone can thrive and succeed

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DEI

Diversity isn’t just a checkbox, equity isn’t just a policy, and inclusion isn’t just a buzzword—they’re the foundation of MeVitae. It's at the heart of what we do. Learn more about our commitment

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CAREERS

Talent has no limits. At MeVitae, we’re committed to creating an environment where talent leads the way, shaping a future full of growth, achievement, and innovation

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PARTNERS

Join a network of industry leaders, tech innovators, and researchers collaborating to shape the future of the workforce and drive meaningful change

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PEOPLE ANALYTICS

MeVitae's all-in-one people analytics solution that turns workforce data into insights, automating reporting and tracking performance for strategic decisions

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MOXIE BENEFITS

3xFaster analysis, three times quicker: MeVitae’s AI tools help teams spot issues quickly, boosting decision-making

HEALTH CHECK

Gain deep insights with an AI-driven system that continuously scans and checks your organization’s HR performance, ensures compliance, and boosts workforce productivity with data-backed strategies

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MOXIE BENEFITS

$100ksignificantly reducing costs and increasing long-term savings by optimizing workforce management

FORENSIC AUDIT

Our forensic audit solution identifies risks, detects non-compliance, and provides analysis to safeguard your organization, avoiding costly lawsuits while aligning with global standards for secure operations

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MOXIE BENEFITS

70%Reduce legal exposure by identifying risks that could lead to costly lawsuits, uncovering risks you might miss

HR STRATEGY

Transform data into actionable HR Strategies. Predict trends, close gaps, and boost workforce performance with MeVitae’s AI-driven insights

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35%Increase in top talent retention with predictive AI, reducing turnover and ensuring long-term workforce stability
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BLOGS

Curious about future of work and how to implement it? Or wondering if AI will take over your job? Check out our latest blogs to stay ahead of the curve and keep learning about the future of work and its role in it

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WHITE PAPER

Take a look at this first-of-its-kind guide on anonymizing recruitment. Dive into in-depth information and the latest insights, backed by experts in neuroscience to understand how it can transform decision-making practices

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CASE STUDIES

Explore our case studies to see how MeVitae's solutions set new standards of excellence, helping clients achieve remarkable results and transform their operations with effective, results-driven technology

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PRESS

Explore how MeVitae is shaping the future with ethical AI, driving innovation in workforce transformation. Our press page showcases groundbreaking tech and partnerships redefining human capital

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Diversity and inclusion: a look back at the key events over the last 120 years

Introduction

As humans, we are naturally motivated to make sense of our social world; categorizing people based on familiarity. How we act on these mental constructs, and subsequently discriminate, depends on a complex set of factors, including our history, sociocultural practices, and the influence of our immediate community. Often taking the form of destructive generalisation’s about different groups, discrimination has always been prevalent within society. In ancient times this looked like women only serving as a mere tool to cook, clean, and bring up children, and the slavery within Babylon Egypt, and Ancient Greece. Even by the late 18th century, the workforce was considered a mans world, and ethnic minorities were segregated to work in service industries. Although there is still plenty of work to be done, society has come a long way over the last 120 years, and this blog aims to cover the diversity and inclusion milestones that took place in the UK and US throughout time.

Early 1900’s

  • 1909: The Niagra Movement was founded by Du Bois and other black leaders in 1905, and in 1909 they joined white reformers to become the National Association for Advancement of Coloured People (NAACP). The NAACP used federal courts to challenge residential segregation.

  • 1910 – 1920: The great migration saw African-Americans in 1000s pour into industrial cities to find work, although here they faced exclusion and discrimination.

  • 1910: African American inventor and entrepreneur Madame C. J. Walker, considered the first black woman millionaire, started a hair care company for black women in Indianapolis

  • 1911: National Insurance act of 1911 was introduced in UK and included a universal maternal health benefit.

  • 1912: London’s first gay pub, Cave of the Golden Calf, opened off of regent street.

  • 1917: Women gained a foothold in American workplace during the first world war, but returned home as this ended.

  • 1918: The eligibility of women act was passed, allowing women to be elected into parliament.

  • 1919: The Sex Disqualification Removal Act was passed, ensuing women’s entry into professions such as lawyers, vets and civil servants.

1920’s

  • 1920: Oxford University allowed the admission of women (1 for every 6 men).

  • 1920: Because of the work of Margaret Brent, who demanded the right to vote in Virginia s house of Burgesses, every state west of the Mississippi river permitted women to vote.

  • 1920: America had a De-Facto woman president, Edith Wilson.

  • 1920: The Women’s Bureau of the Department of Labour formed to safeguard women in workplace.

  • 1920: The Blind Person Act was passed, providing a pension allowance for blind persons aged 50-70.

  • 1928: Women gained the right to vote in the UK as part of the Equal Franchise Act.

The first female graduates from Somerville college.

The first female graduates from Somerville college.

1930’s

  • 1931: Harold Moody called a meeting with UK Civil rights activists in a YMCA in Tottenham Court Road and here the League of Coloured Peoples (LCP) was formed to combat the racial disparities he and many other faced daily, such as the unofficial colour bar in place/

  • 1932: Hattie Wyatt Caraway became the first woman elected to US Senate.

  • 1935: The Congress of Industrial organizations (CIO) formed, supporting racial egalitarian rhetoric, although discriminatory practices continued.

  • 1936: At the Berlin Olympics, Jesse Owens defined Nazi racist propaganda to win 4 golds.

  • 1936: Mark Weston, 30 year old British athletic champion, transitioned from female to male.

1940’s

  • 1941: The National Service Act was enforced, calling upon all unmarried women between 20 and 30 years for war work.

  • 1943: “The origin of diversity” – the first modern equal employment legislation was introduced in congress and then 5 years later, President Truman signed the Executive Order 9981 to desegregate the armed services. The order required equal treatment and opportunity in the armed services, although it did not actually forbid segregation.

  • 1944: The Disabled Persons Employment Act was passed, requiring employers with over 20 members of staff to ensure at least 3% of staff were disabled.

  • 1945: Sir Harold Gillies, and Ralph Millard carried out the first female to male confirmation surgery on Michael Dillon.

  • 1945: Learie Constantine became the first black person to gain an MBE.

1950’s

  • 1952: Dr Dorothy Garrod became the first female professor at Cambridge University.

  • 1954: The Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka was a landmark Supreme Court case in which the justices ruled our racial segregation in public schools. However, many still remained segregated.

  • 1955: Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white man on a Montogomery Alabama bus.

  • 1956: Legal reforms in Britain said that women teachers and civil servants should receive equal pay.

  • 1958: The Homosexual Law Reform Society was founded in the United Kingdom following the Wolfenden report, to begin a campaign to make homosexuality legal in the UK.

1960’s

  • 1963: Martin Luther King Jr. gave his “I Have a Dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial.

  • 1964: President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, making employment discrimination due to race, colour, sex, religion, or national origin, illegal for employers with more than 15 employees.

  • 1965: Lord Arran proposed decriminalizing male homosexual acts in the house of lords.

  • 1967: The Sexual Offences Act 1967 was passed, prohibiting violence and unfair treatment of gay men in response to English schoolteacher Kenneth Crowe (aged 37) who was found dead wearing his wives clothes and a wig in 1950.

  • 1968: 850 women machinists at ford factory in Dagenham went on strike over equal pay.

  • 1968: President Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968, providing equal housing opportunities regardless of race, religion, or national origin.

  • 1969: The Campaign for Homosexual Equality (CHE) formed as the first British gay activist group.

  • 1969: By the end of the 60’s, many organisations, communities, military sectors, and higher education institutions were conducting some form of diversity education training in the US.

Martin Luther King Jr. during his ‘I have a dream’ speech in 1963.

Martin Luther King Jr. during his ‘I have a dream’ speech in 1963.

1970’s

  • 1970: The Equal Pay Act was introduced in the UK, prohibiting any less favorable treatment between men and women in terms of pay and conditions of employment, with a similar act introduced in the USA in 1963.

  • 1970: The Gay Liberation Front emerged and LGBT pride began.

  • 1971: The Association for Disabled People (APA) was established.

  • 1972: The UK became the first nation to allow citizens to legally change their sex.

  • 1972: The Equal Employment Opportunities Act was introduced to prohibit job discrimination in terms of race, religion, colour, natural origin, supreme court. The supreme court also provided the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) the authority to sue for reasons of discrimination.

  • 1973: 10 women were admitted to the London Stock Exchange.

  • 1973: Sybil Phoenix became the first black women to receive MBE for her work in fostering.

  • 1974: Maureen Colquhoun became the first lesbian MP for Labor party.

  • 1975: The Maternity Leave Legislation made paternity pay a requirement.

  • 1976: The Race relations act was established to prevent discrimination on the grounds of race.

  • 1979: Margaret Thatcher became the first female PM.

1980’s

  • 1981: The shocking pink collective, written by and for young women, was set up to discuss topics like abortion, lesbianism, and violence against women.

  • 1982: The Commissions Of Restrictions Against Disabled People (CORAD) began the campaign for civil rights legislation that culminated in the disability discrimination act.

  • 1985: Chris Smith became the first openly out homosexual politician in UK parliament

  • 1987: The International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA) was founded as the International Gay Association (IGA) on 8 August during the conference of the Campaign for Homosexual Equality.

  • 1987: William Brock, The secretary of Labor, commissioned a study of economic and demographic trends. This later became the landmark book “Workforce 2000 - Work and Workers in the Twenty First Century”, highlighting five demographic factors that would impact the U.S labor market:

    1. The population and the workforce will grow more slowly than at any time since the 1930s.

    2. The average age of the population and the workforce will rise, and the pool of young workers entering the labor market will shrink.

    3. More women will enter the workforce.

    4. Minorities will be a larger share of the new entrants into the labor force.

    5. Legal and illegal immigrants will represent the largest share of the increase in the population and the workforce since World War I."

  • 1989: LGBTQ+ campaign group, Stonewall UK, was set up to oppose barriers to equality.

1990s

  • 1990: Feminist punk subculture ‘riot grrrl’ triggered the third wave of feminism. Influenced by the postmodernist movement, third-wave feminists sought to question, reclaim and redefine the ideas, words and media that have transmitted ideas about womanhood, gender, beauty, sexuality and femininity.

  • 1990: Diversity education in US expanded to focus on barriers to inclusion for different groups, including ethnic minorities, religious groups, and the LGBTQ+ community.

  • 1990: America became the first country to adopt a comprehensive civil rights declaration for people with disabilities. This was a landmark moment in history, enabling universal accessibility in the areas of employment, public service, public accommodations, and telecommunications.

  • 1991: The Disability Living Allowance was introduced in the UK.

  • 1992: Betty Boothroyd became the first female speaker in the house of commons.

  • 1992: Mae Jemison became the first African-American women in space.

  • 1993: The racially motivated murder of Stephen Lawrence sparked cultural changes in UK, with the murderers later convicted in 2012.

  • 1995: The Disability Discrimination Act was introduced, enabling new rights for disabled people in employment.

George Bush signing into law the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.

George Bush signing into law the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.

00’s

  • 2000: The World Health Organization (WHO) changed the definition of homosexuality from being a mental health illness.

  • 2001: Clara Furse became the first female to occupy a chief executive position of London stock exchange.

  • 2001: The last two pieces of unequal law regarding gay male sex were changed, with equal rights to adapt for same sex couples coming into play in 2002.

  • 2003: Employment equality regulations made it illegal to discriminate against lesbians, gays or bisexuals at work.

  • 2003: 36.5% of students starting their first degree law course were from minority ethnic groups.

  • 2004: The gender recognition act 2004 enabled people to legally change their gender.

  • 2006: The #metoo campaign was created by Tarana Burke, later growing into an international movement of women speaking up about sexual harassment in 2017.

  • 2008: San Jose Mercury news began investigating the 15 largest tech companies in silicon valley who refused to share their diversity data.

  • 2009: Ursala Burns became the first black female CEO of a fortune 500 company.

2010’s

  • 2010: Rushanara Ali, Shabana Mahmood and Yasmin Qureshi became the first female Muslim Members of Parliament.

  • 2010: The Equality Act 2010 stated that organisations should make appropriate adjustments to ensure disabled people can access education, employment, housing, goods and services, and associations, such as adding step free access for wheelchair users. This act also prohibited employees discriminating against applicants during the course of their employment.

  • 2014: Tech giants (including Google, Apple, and Microsoft) published annual diversity reports, encouraging many businesses to follow.

  • 2014: Same sex marriage became legal in UK under the marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013.

  • 2015: Bobbie Cheema-Grubb QC became the first Asian women high court judge.

  • 2017: Changes were made to the Equality Act, making it compulsory for British companies with more than 250 employees to report their gender pay gap figures each year.

2020’s

  • 2020: In March Breonna Taylor was shot by Louisville police officers, and in May, the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police sparked global movement; #sayhisname, #blacklivesmatter, and global protests.

  • 2021: Gina Abercrombie-Winstanley became the Department of State’s first Chief Diversity Officer, a position created to make the US diplomatic– a position created to make the US diplomatic corps more representative.

  • 2021: The term ‘BAME’, stemming from 1970s antiracist movement became recognized as being problematic. Over time ‘BAME’ has became an umbrella term for all ethnic minorities, thus leading to widescale generalization.

Image from the Black Lives matter protests in 2020.

Image from the Black Lives matter protests in 2020.

** Author:** Emma Bluck (Marketing and Scientific Communications Lead)

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