Adia Harvey Wingfield, PhD, is a leading sociologist and celebrated author who examines racial and gender inequality in professional occupations. Dr. Wingfield is the Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor in Arts & Sciences and vice dean of faculty development and diversity at Washington University in St. Louis. She is the 116th president of the American Sociological Association and served as president of Sociologists for Women in Society (SWS) and the Southern Sociological Society (SSS). Her latest book, Flatlining: Race, Work, and Health Care in the New Economy, won the 2019 C. Wright Mills Award from the Society for the Study of Social Problems. She lives in St. Louis, Missouri.
"This vital work is important for anyone committed to dismantling
racism. Farseeing and eye-opening, Gray Areas exposes - through
years of research and credible data - the insidious mechanisms by
which our workplaces sustain racism and provides a trailblazing
antiracist framework for us all." -- IBRAM X. KENDI, #1 New York
Times bestselling author of How to Be an Antiracist"An informed,
incisive consideration of how racial biases at work could be
overcome."
-- Kirkus Reviews"Sociologist Wingfield (Flatlining) delivers an
authoritative study of racial inequality in the workplace. Drawing
from more than a decade's worth of interviews with seven Black
workers in various fields--including academia, medicine, and
film--Wingfield demonstrates how the customs and practices
entrenched in corporate culture perpetuate institutional racism. .
. . This vital and accessible study is a must-read for HR
departments and managers, and will interest anyone concerned with
workplace equality."
-- Publishers Weekly (starred review)"Whether you are a leader,
manager, or individual contributor, this book will help you see
biases that are often hard to detect, and support you with ideas
and practices to address them." -- TARA MOHR, #1 New York Times
bestselling author of Playing Big."Gray Areas is a must read as we
navigate the future of work. Wingfield uses masterful
research-based storytelling to illustrate how the gray areas of the
modern work world facilitate ongoing racial inequality. Gray Areas
provides a thoughtful road map to getting work to work for all." --
EVE RODSKY, New York Times bestselling author of Fair Play: A
Game-Changing Solution for When You Have Too Much to Do (and More
Life to Live)"A groundbreaking book that is both bold in its
premise and precise in its exploration of systemic racism in the
workplace. Given the current concerted and well-funded efforts to
undermine and de-stabilize diversity and equity programs first in
education, and next within corporations, this could not be a more
urgent and necessary blueprint for progress."
-- BAKARI SELLERS, New York Times bestselling author of My
Vanishing Country: A Memoir"Gray Areas solidifies Dr. Adia Harvey
Wingfield's reputation as one of the nation's leading experts on
race, class, and gender inequality in the workplace. [It] takes
readers behind the flashy corporate promises to diversify by
illuminating the hidden spaces where workplace disparities lurk.
Outright discrimination is illegal, yet racial and gender
distinctions still shape how workplaces decide who should manage
and who should be managed, who climbs the hierarchy, and who gets
climbed over. Everyone interested in creating an honest reckoning
with workplace inequality should read this book."
-- VICTOR RAY, F. Wendell Miller Associate Professor of Sociology
and Criminology and African American Studies, The University of
Iowa, and Nonresident Fellow in Governance Studies, The Brookings
Institution"Corporate leaders see their firms as meritocratic, and
they may be on paper. But workplace cultures, social isolation, and
lack of mentoring work in ways, subtle and not, to keep Black
Americans out of the running for the best jobs. At once deeply
personal and sharply analytic, this riveting book documents how
employers have failed Black Americans. It is ultimately an
optimistic call to action -- for every wrong she identifies,
Wingfield details how we can right it. Bravo!" -- Frank Dobbin,
Henry Ford II Professor of the Social Sciences and Chair of the
Department of Sociology at Harvard University and author of Getting
to Diversity"Debates concerning race and opportunity in the post
civil rights era have became predictable and stale, awash in
diversity platitudes on the one hand, and cliches of rugged
meritocratic colorblindness on the other. Gray Areas provides a
fresh, new way forward. Dr. Wingfield shows us the importance of
the 'gray areas, ' and how these social, relational, and cultural
norms of work are the key to addressing racial inequality in the
work place. After reading this book, you will understand why the
road map to a more perfect union goes through the grey areas." --
Dr. Lerone A. Martin, Centennial Professor and Director of the
Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute at
Stanford University.
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