
Should preferred pronouns be disclosed on resumes? For non-binary people looking for a job, that decision should consider the now-quantifiable likelihood of discrimination by potential employers. Disclosing the use of nonbinary pronouns on resumes reduces positive employer response by 5.4 to 5.5 percentage points. The results come from a field experiment conducted by Taryn Eames, a PhD candidate at the Department of Economics, University of Toronto. It is the first large-scale study of its kind to examine pronoun disclosure and employer discrimination.
“Putting “they/them” pronouns on your resume will disadvantage applicants in terms of average employer response,” said Eames. “However, if it is important for applicants to work at a company that respects them and their identity, disclosing pronouns may be a useful filter to screen out discriminatory employers.”
Eames’ experiment took the form of a resume audit. She sent thousands of randomly generated fictitious resumes to job postings in pairs. The treatment resume contained pronouns listed below the name and the control resume did not. In the treatment resume, Eames tested both nonbinary “they/them” pronouns and binary “he/him” or “she/her” pronouns consistent with implied gender of the name used on the resume. Resumes disclosing the use of they/them were less likely to receive a positive employer response, such as an invitation to interview, a voice mail or an email requesting a call back, or other expressions of interest. [Read more…]