Background: The growth of the United States' diverse population and the increasing number of diverse nursing students highlight the importance of having a more diverse nursing faculty.The literature has supported that the search committee plays a vital role in hiring nursing faculty, including those from diverse backgrounds.Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the perceptions and experiences of search committee members in the hiring of diverse nursing faculty.Methods: A qualitative descriptive method was used to explore the perceptions and experiences of faculty (N = 15) who served on the search committees.The researcher used snowball sampling.Discussion: It was found that informal committee selection and existing demographic constraints (majority White female faculty) often perpetuate institutional homophily.A systemic lack of student involvement in the search process was also identified.While committee interactions were democratic, final decisionmaking was moderated by administrative gatekeeping.Desirable candidate traits were filtered through the subjective lens of "fit."Coupled with unconscious bias, this created a notable implementation gap between diversity missions and procedural reality.Conclusion: Diversity implementation remains fragmented, necessitating a shift from passive consideration to structural anchoring.In the current sociopolitical climate, nursing leaders may need to explain diversity as a clinical safety mandate rather than an elective goal.To bridge the recruitment gap, institutions should implement bias-literate rubrics and integrate student feedback into the selection process.
Treesa J. Scaria (Fri,) studied this question.