A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture
A call to action to dismantle the white supremacy work culture in libraries, and create an environment where EDI is not only talked about but realized.

Are the standards of professionalism that your organization has set still serving you? Or might libraries and library workers challenge our long-held beliefs about what our work culture is or should be? A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture interrogates the historical foundations and present day consequences of a library work culture that is rooted in white supremacy. These white supremacy work culture habits show up in every aspect of library service, from programming, policy development, hiring practices, strategic planning, and even our ways of communicating and engaging. Even as libraries and library workers have been intentional in introducing and developing practices that center equity, diversity, and inclusion, the quiet intersectionality of white supremacy work culture coupled with our professional standards of librarianship have informed our internal work practices, shaping our perspectives and perceptions around what it means to be a 'good librarian.'

Library workers and libraries are already having authentic and challenging conversations about the impacts of equity, diversity, and inclusion on library services. However, these conversations are often external in nature, guided by a solidly patron-centric focus. This book challenges libraries and librarians to turn inward to examine the oppressive internal systems that libraries have developed, sustained, and promoted.

Using Tema Okun's seminal research on white supremacy culture as inspiration A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture will reimagine the reader as an active participant in both discovering and addressing how the aspects of white supremacy culture inform our library work.
1146956747
A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture
A call to action to dismantle the white supremacy work culture in libraries, and create an environment where EDI is not only talked about but realized.

Are the standards of professionalism that your organization has set still serving you? Or might libraries and library workers challenge our long-held beliefs about what our work culture is or should be? A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture interrogates the historical foundations and present day consequences of a library work culture that is rooted in white supremacy. These white supremacy work culture habits show up in every aspect of library service, from programming, policy development, hiring practices, strategic planning, and even our ways of communicating and engaging. Even as libraries and library workers have been intentional in introducing and developing practices that center equity, diversity, and inclusion, the quiet intersectionality of white supremacy work culture coupled with our professional standards of librarianship have informed our internal work practices, shaping our perspectives and perceptions around what it means to be a 'good librarian.'

Library workers and libraries are already having authentic and challenging conversations about the impacts of equity, diversity, and inclusion on library services. However, these conversations are often external in nature, guided by a solidly patron-centric focus. This book challenges libraries and librarians to turn inward to examine the oppressive internal systems that libraries have developed, sustained, and promoted.

Using Tema Okun's seminal research on white supremacy culture as inspiration A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture will reimagine the reader as an active participant in both discovering and addressing how the aspects of white supremacy culture inform our library work.
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A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture

A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture

by Christina Fuller-Gregory
A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture

A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture

by Christina Fuller-Gregory

eBook

$34.20 

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Overview

A call to action to dismantle the white supremacy work culture in libraries, and create an environment where EDI is not only talked about but realized.

Are the standards of professionalism that your organization has set still serving you? Or might libraries and library workers challenge our long-held beliefs about what our work culture is or should be? A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture interrogates the historical foundations and present day consequences of a library work culture that is rooted in white supremacy. These white supremacy work culture habits show up in every aspect of library service, from programming, policy development, hiring practices, strategic planning, and even our ways of communicating and engaging. Even as libraries and library workers have been intentional in introducing and developing practices that center equity, diversity, and inclusion, the quiet intersectionality of white supremacy work culture coupled with our professional standards of librarianship have informed our internal work practices, shaping our perspectives and perceptions around what it means to be a 'good librarian.'

Library workers and libraries are already having authentic and challenging conversations about the impacts of equity, diversity, and inclusion on library services. However, these conversations are often external in nature, guided by a solidly patron-centric focus. This book challenges libraries and librarians to turn inward to examine the oppressive internal systems that libraries have developed, sustained, and promoted.

Using Tema Okun's seminal research on white supremacy culture as inspiration A Library Worker's Guide to Saying No to White Supremacy Work Culture will reimagine the reader as an active participant in both discovering and addressing how the aspects of white supremacy culture inform our library work.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781538193143
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 08/07/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 481 KB

About the Author

Christina Fuller-Gregory is principal consultant and Founder of Fuller Potential Consulting,a consultancy at the forefront of preparing individuals and organizations to harness the power of authentic belonging. Growing up in the Upstate of South Carolina as the daughter of a Library Administrator Christina Fuller-Gregory always knew two things 1) that she would never be a librarian like her mother and 2) that after attending countless library programs on the weekends, her least favorite place was the library. Luckily, an adult Christina discovered that she was wrong on both counts. She did, in fact, become a librarian like her mom, and Libraries would ultimately become her Third Place. Today, Fuller-Gregory uses her lifelong relationship with Libraries to inform her work as a people-driven, community-centered library leader. Christina has been recognized as an American Library Association's Emerging Leader, she's acted as a committee member and chair for numerous library committees, and was recognized for her work in the equity space by Library Journal when she was named a Mover&Shaker. She is a highly sought-after speaker and consultant, and her writing has been featured in numerous publications. Led by Fannie Lou Hamer's belief that 'Nobody's free until everybody's free,' Christina's research and writing is driven by a desire to see Libraries develop strategies for positively shifting their organizational purpose.
Christina Fuller-Gregory is principal consultant and Founder of Fuller Potential Consulting, a consultancy at the forefront of preparing individuals and organizations to harness the power of authentic belonging. Growing up in the Upstate of South Carolina as the daughter of a Library Administrator Christina Fuller-Gregory always knew two things 1) that she would never be a librarian like her mother and 2) that after attending countless library programs on the weekends, her least favorite place was the library. Luckily, an adult Christina discovered that she was wrong on both counts. She did, in fact, become a librarian like her mom, and Libraries would ultimately become her Third Place. Today, Fuller-Gregory uses her lifelong relationship with Libraries to inform her work as a people-driven, community-centered library leader. Christina has been recognized as an American Library Association's Emerging Leader, she's acted as a committee member and chair for numerous library committees, and was recognized for her work in the equity space by Library Journal when she was named a Mover& Shaker. She is a highly sought-after speaker and consultant, and her writing has been featured in numerous publications. Led by Fannie Lou Hamer's belief that 'Nobody's free until everybody's free,' Christina's research and writing is driven by a desire to see Libraries develop strategies for positively shifting their organizational purpose.

Table of Contents

Foreword
Chapter 1: Introducing White Supremacy Work Culture
Chapter 2: An Organizational Culture of Perfectionism
Chapter 3: All the Write Words
Chapter 4: No Time to Spare
Chapter 5: The Way it's Always Been Done
Part 2: A Practice in Reflection
Chapter 6: The Myth of Professionalism
Chapter 7: No Conflict Please
Chapter 8: Defensive Maneuvers
Chapter 9: Stretched and Stressed
Part 3: Shifting Our Views of Professionalism
Chapter 10: Showing Up Authentically
Chapter 11: No 'I' in Team
Chapter 12: Honoring Complexity
Chapter 13: The Comfort of Privilege
Chapter 14: Our Path Forward
Index
About the Author
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