
Serein Inclusion Team
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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
Assistive tech at work: From screen readers to adapted hardware, these tools are essential for levelling the playing field for disabled talent.
Blind hiring, structured interviews and bias training reduce discrimination in hiring.
Neurodivergent hiring programs tap into unique strengths, benefiting firms and employees.
Solidarity among women counters patriarchal divides, fostering collective advancement. Here's why women need to stand up for their fellow women:
Feedback loops often carry unexpressed bias. Vague critiques and skewed benchmarks hold marginalised groups back from advancement.
Queer baiting in films fails to represent real LGBTQIA+ lives with depth or respect. Bollywood has drastically shifted away from allyship to a dangerous negative.
Workplaces often overlook emotional wellbeing, yet fostering psychological safety boosts engagement and productivity.
Overcoming self-doubt requires recognising achievements, reframing thoughts and seeking supportive mentorship. This is how:
Marginalised groups face heightened imposter feelings due to systemic biases and lack of representation. How can we combat it?
Women disproportionately experience imposter syndrome, worsened by gender stereotypes and workplace barriers. Here’s why:
Human oversight, diverse training data and ethical frameworks are crucial to prevent AI discrimination. How?
Fear of stigma, career penalties and lack of support deter employees from disclosing disabilities. Can we stop this?
Silence around domestic violence hurts workplaces too. Recognise signs, offer safe support systems & flexible policies to help survivors heal & retain employment.
India’s Domestic Violence Act protects both parties in live-in relationships. Understanding this legal recognition is crucial for safety & seeking rightful recourse.
Cinema often sensationalises domestic violence. Responsible storytelling should highlight realities, survivor strength & pathways to support, not perpetuate myths.
Gaslighting is psychological abuse making victims doubt their reality. Recognise manipulation tactics, trust your instincts & seek support to break free from this.
Women have the right to protection orders, residence, monetary relief & legal aid under India’s Domestic Violence Act. Knowing these enables survivors to be safe.
Consent & boundaries are key. Domestic violence shatters both. Rebuilding starts with respecting autonomy & recognising coercive control as a violation of rights.
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.