Celebration Diversity Day | Intersectionality
On Tuesday, October 7, 2025, we are celebrating Diversity Day with a focus on Intersectionality*. From 12 pm to 6 pm there will be a symposium organized by nine diversity networks of HU University of Applied Sciences, UMC Utrecht and Utrecht University.
After a powerful keynote about intersectionality by neurodiversity expert, Rosalie Ekstein, you can choose two workshops. Workshops include cultural sensitivity training, digital accessibility and having sensitive conversations from an intersectional perspective. You can also have your professional photo taken in a safer space and discover what your aura says about you. We are closing the day with a borrel where you can further connect with the different diversity networks. Registration for one of more parts of the day is possible until Friday 3 October. Everyone is welcome!
This event is being organised by Netwerk USP Inclusief (soon to be named U-AccessAbility) with support from the following networks:
- HU University of Applied Sciences: Gender and Sexuality Alliance (GSA), Netwerk Diversiteit en Inclusie, CariMix
- UMC Utrecht: CultuurConnect, BeYou!
- Utrecht University: Queer@UU, Incluusion Community, African and Caribbean Heritage Network
Programme
In the registration form you can register per workshop.
12.00 – 12.30: Walk in with coffee and tea
12.30 – 13.40: Keynote (ENG)
13.40 – 14.00: Break
14.00 – 15.00: Session 1, choice of workshop
15.00 – 15.30: Break
15.30 – 16.30: Session 2, choice of workshop
16.30 – 18.00: borrel
All parts of this symposium have intersectionality as a starting point. We are organising the event with a continual focus on inclusion and inclusive language.
Content
Keynote ‘Neurodiversity: neuroqueer from an intersectional perspective'(ENG)
During this seminar, Rosalie Ekstein (they/them) will take you on a journey through the world of gender and sexuality within the neurodiversity movement. The concept of ‘neuroqueer’ will be introduced and linked to other identities. This intersectional perspective offers insight and guidance for anyone involved in social inequality, HR, or neurodiversity. Rosalie is a sociologist-philosopher, neurodivergent, including neuroqueer, and supports organizations with change processes.
The keynote will be closed with words from John de Wit (Diversity Dean of Utrecht University) and Elena Valbusa (Diversity Officer of HU University of Applied Sciences).
All day exhibition
Session 1 – workshops
Session 2 – workshops
Practical information
Date: Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025, from 12 p.m. – 6 p.m.
Location: Utrecht Science Park, HU University of Applied Sciences, Padualaan 101.
Admission: free.
For whom: this celebration is for everyone who works or studies at an organisation associated with Utrecht Science Park. This includes staff, managers, (HR-)professionals, and other interested parties.
Accessibility: the venue is wheelchair accessible and a quiet room is available. Can we help with anything else? Let us know when you register and we will look at the possibilities with you.
Registration: you can register until Friday 3 October.
*intersectionality is the acknowledgement that all forms of oppression, exclusion, and discrimination are connected. When several identity factors overlap, this can result in complex combinations of discrimination and privilege. Factors including, but not limited to, gender, race/ethnicity, (dis-)ability, neurodiversity, class, sexuality, religion, body type/weight, and age combine to create unique intersections. It is not simply ‘stacking several identity factors that can lead to discrimination’, also called ‘oppression Olympics’, as in ‘gosh, that person not only has to deal with sexism and trans hate, but also with Islamophobia and racism!’. Intersectionality means that it makes no sense to only advocate for the human rights of one group while another group is still being excluded. For example: if someone is advocating for the rights of white women, but not for Black women and other women of colour, they’re not intersectional. If someone is fighting against racism, but continues with ableism within their anti-racist movement, they’re not intersectional. The term was used for the first time in 1989 by Kimberlé Crenshaw.