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Future direction in HRD: the potential of testimonio as an approach to perturb the dominant practices in the workplace

Abbie Salcedo (Department of Counseling, Leadership, Adult Education and School Psychology, Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas, USA)
Peter Williams (Department of Educational Leadership, A&M-Commerce University, Commerce, Texas, USA)
Simone Elias (Department of Education Leadership, Abilene Christian University, Dallas, Texas, USA)
Maxine Valencia (Western Technical College, El Paso, Texas, USA)
Jonathan Perez (Board Governance and Leadership, Dallas, Texas, USA)

European Journal of Training and Development

ISSN: 2046-9012

Article publication date: 15 March 2022

Issue publication date: 2 August 2022

503

Abstract

Purpose

Marginalization exists in many organizations, despite a zero-tolerance stance on discrimination, abuse and harassment. Human resource development (HRD) professionals are increasingly asked to respond to the calls for crucial conversations on race and diversity. However, traditional HRD methods and tools may not be sufficient to address and eradicate racism in the workplace. The usage of testimonio could enable oppressed groups to communicate their narratives to counter stereotypes. This paper aims to describe testimonio and the various ways it can be used as a research methodology and to perturb the dominant practices in the workplace.

Design/methodology/approach

This conceptual paper uses testimonio, a narrative methodology with Latin American roots in indigenous oral storytelling, to expand beyond Eurocentric qualitative approaches to capture the voices of marginalized groups. This study gives examples and theorizes how leaders, including human resource professionals, may use this approach to give voice to underrepresented stakeholders in the margins of organizations. Testimonio serves as a non-Eurocentric framework and venue to legitimize their stories. Their voices are assets, enriching while transforming and perturbing and so are needed for communities and organizations to foster a just and sustainable culture and climate.

Findings

The use of testimonio as an HRD approach to amplify unrepresented voices in the workplace may be an asset to HRD professionals. However, to realize the full potential of this research tradition in HRD, researchers and practitioners must create more space where trust is present for these groups to tell stories that matter most to them.

Research limitations/implications

This study on the testimonio approach provides a view into organizational power dynamics and voices from the margins. It serves as a means to acknowledge the voices of underrepresented stakeholders in the workplace. HRD scholars should contribute to organizational effectiveness and inclusive workplace climate by using scholarship to highlight the harm of marginalizing policies and behaviors.

Practical implications

Testimonio implies that HRD practitioners in positions of privilege should use their authority to foreground the voices of marginalized individuals who are typically silenced. This can be accomplished by prioritizing unheard voices in the work of HRD professionals. Testimonio as a methodological approach and workplace tool highlights the personal experiences of oppressed groups who experience social injustice, particularly racism. This method encourages organizations that do not operate in a culturally sensitive and inclusive environment to reconsider the discourse that influences their social position.

Originality/value

While there is a clear need to address inequities, few practical inquiry tools are presented. Moreover, through their epistemologies and research procedures, scholars and practitioners may unintentionally maintain and reinforce existing inequitable structures and processes. This paper presents testimonio as a non-Western alternative to Eurocentric qualitative research methodologies to perturb dominant practices in HRD.

Keywords

Citation

Salcedo, A., Williams, P., Elias, S., Valencia, M. and Perez, J. (2022), "Future direction in HRD: the potential of testimonio as an approach to perturb the dominant practices in the workplace", European Journal of Training and Development, Vol. 46 No. 7/8, pp. 727-739. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJTD-07-2021-0109

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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