
Serein Inclusion Team
3 min read
What we see online often plays a key role in breaking the mould of stereotypes. TV Shows have pushed forth in this domain, be it through the Chess masterpiece in the Queen’s Gambit or the Urdu dramedy in Chudails.
- All
- People and culture
- Domestic violence
- Life at Serein
To clarify harassment, define behaviour, share examples and study cases. Empowering staff through practical insight helps challenge inappropriate conduct.
Ethnic or cultural slurs damage inclusion. Diversity training, swift investigation and just disciplinary action promote safety and workplace belonging.
Motherhood changes more than routines. It shifts identities, challenges assumptions, and invites deep reflection on who we are beyond the roles we play every day.
Zero-tolerance, regular training and safe reporting empower staff and foster a workplace where dignity, equity and mutual respect can truly thrive for all.
Small acts of support create ripple effects, normalising inclusion across communities.
Fear of backlash silences employees; fostering trust encourages innovation and honesty.
Trust is about confidence in others; psychological safety is about confidence in being yourself. Together, they shape open, resilient teams where people thrive.
Psychological safety is key for an essential workplace. According to Timothy R Clark’s work, it is of four types: Inclusion, Learner, Contributer and Challenger safety.
Empathy is noticing what others miss; being an empathetic bystander means responding with care, not silence, and helping shape safer, more respectful workplaces.
When we wait for others to act, nothing changes. Overcoming the “someone else will do it” mindset means stepping up, even when it’s uncomfortable, to create the change we seek.
This work describes the nature of psychological safety, its appearance and the illusory role it plays upon developing company success.
This piece attempts to discern the reason for increasing Queer presence in modern media, and finds mental health, media celebrities amidst major contributors.
Domestic violence isn’t random anger; it’s a calculated cycle of tension, abuse, reconciliation & calm, reinforcing the abuser’s power & control over the victim
Evidence in domestic violence cases includes medical reports, photos, threatening messages/emails, witness statements, police records & personal diaries.
A break doesn’t break your career. With patience, purpose, and a little ‘me time,’ a restart can be a reinvention – on your terms, in your time, with confidence.
Career breaks don’t erase capability. With experience, adaptability, and the right support, women returning to work can lead fast, thrive faster and uplift teams too.