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A new survey has highlighted how hair discrimination is still affecting Black women in the workforce.

Out of roughly 1,000 Black women ages 25 to 64, 25 percent believe they were denied a job interview because of their hair, according to the CROWN Research Study, a survey commissioned by LinkedIn and Dove, per NBC News.

66 percent of the Black women surveyed said they changed their hair for a job interview to avoid being passed over due to discrimination.

Even after they’re hired, Black women with textured hair are twice as likely to face microaggressions compared to their counterparts with straight hair. 25 percent of Black women ages 25 to 34 said they were sent home from work due to their hair, according to the survey.

Experiencing hair discrimination during the early stages of one’s career could cause an automatic “disconnect of belonging” and loss of confidence in skills for Black professionals, said Andrew McCaskill, a senior director of global communications and career expert for LinkedIn.

“What we know is that, as you get more mature in your career, you’re typically also more confident in your skills that you have and what you bring to the table,” McCaskill said. “For younger folks, these types of aggressions and microaggressions can cause real angst for them in terms of even to the point of doubting their skills and saying, ‘I can’t do this anymore.’”

On the federal level, the House passed the Crown Act last year to ban hair discrimination. California passed its own law, banning hair discrimination in 2019, and a number of other states have followed suit.

Companies should be intentional about giving Black employees “space for their authenticity at work,” McCaskill said. Above all, McCaskill notes that companies must “believe Black women when they have the bravery and courage to say that they are experiencing microaggressions and or hair discrimination at work.”

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The Atlanta Daily World is the oldest black newspaper in Atlanta, Georgia, founded in 1928. Currently owned by Real Times Inc., it publishes daily online. It was "one of the earliest and most influential black newspapers."

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