India, April 9 -- justify;">In a land where language, cuisine, clothing, and traditions change every few hundred kilometers, a trip through India can often feel like a visit to many countries. Many of us in India are multilingual - not just bilingual - with fluency in our regional or mother tongues in addition to Hindi and English. For those who live and work in India's bustling metros, it isn't unusual to have a social circle that spans India's language, culture, religion and community spectrums.
When we actively think about diversity and inclusion, our diversity and socio-cultural differences can sometimes lead to unconscious bias - that act as blind spots to the ways in which we aren't being inclusive. Women, particularly those who do...
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