“…It is further differentiated from other forms of training, because it brings social identities (i.e., selfdefinitions tied to membership in social categories, such as race, sex, or ethnic group; Tajfel & Turner, 1979) to the forefront, potentially eliciting strong emotions from participants (Hanover & Cellar, 1998;Rynes & Rosen, 1995). Often, diversity training includes topics that may be uncomfortable for trainees, which may trigger personal trauma (Epstein, 1994), invoke deep emotions around one's own privilege (MacDonald, 1993), threaten valued identities or social status (Dover, Major, & Kaiser, 2016;Rawski, 2017), and increase unintended backfiring effects (Leslie, 2019;Rawski, 2017). These issues make diversity training unique from general diversity-related behaviors that occur outside of a training and development context and from general job-related training.…”