Review by Booklist Review
Livingston, a social psychologist and professor of public policy, explores the nature of racism and addresses how everyone can take collective action to eliminate it. By highlighting the importance of conversation, Livingston guides readers to understand racial bias and ways to intervene and to mitigate racism. Drawing on psychology, history, political science, biology, economics, and sociology, Livingston shares research findings, observations, anecdotes, and stories from his own background in framing this systemic issue. The narratives throughout each chapter are clearly written, and at times it feels as if Livingston is having a conversation with the reader. This book is uniquely structured through Livingston's PRESS model for addressing racism: Problem awareness, Root cause analysis, Empathy, Strategy, Sacrifice. His teaching requires intentional focus and practice; this is not a casual read, but can be consulted as a reference as needed. Readers interested in workplace and organizational cultures and social psychology will find Livingston's work inspiring, and helpful in understanding the impact of racism on people, organizations, and communities at large.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Social psychologist Livingston debuts with an optimistic guide for "turn difficult conversations about race into productive outcomes." Drawing on his work as a diversity consultant for corporations including Airbnb, Livingston structures the book as a "road map" for fostering the kinds of discussions that can lead to a more equitable society. Steps for uniting people of different backgrounds in the cause of anti-racism include coming up with a working definition of racism, identifying the structural origins of racial inequality, discussing the psychological causes of in-group bias, sketching the moral and economic costs of racial prejudice, and outlining the steps organization leaders and employees can make toward "real progress." Livingston includes a wealth of sociological research into how stereotypes form and the ways in which Blacks and other minority groups have been held back in American society, and points to the success of recent public and private sector initiatives including a JPMorgan Chase program to improve the financial wellness and educational and career prospects of people of color. Readers looking to implement the lessons of Ibram X. Kendi's How to Be An Antiracist and Robin DiAngelo's White Fragility in a professional setting will find this to be a useful guide. (Feb.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A thoughtful plan to combat racism. Making his book debut, social psychologist Livingston distills his professional expertise as diversity consultant to Fortune 500 companies, police departments, hospitals, universities, federal agencies, and nonprofit organizations--and his own experience as an African American--to offer a pragmatic, generous, and optimistic guide for confronting racism. "My hope," he writes, "is that The Conversation will bring people together to talk honestly about race, with the goal of creating profound and sustainable social change." Lucidly interpreting theory, data, and research from a wide range of scientific disciplines, the author examines how individuals form their ideas about race, identity, and morality; what forces shape their behavior; and how changes might be effected. Tribalism--the need to differentiate between "us" and "them"--is wired into humans, Livingston asserts, contributing to the development of stereotypes and the perception of structural threats (which disrupt the status quo) and psychological threats (which undermine an individual's sense of self-worth). He explains and illustrates terms such as White privilege, anchoring bias, and implicit bias, and he distinguishes between prejudice (what someone feels about a particular group) and discrimination (how someone behaves toward a particular group). Some people, he acknowledges, deny that racism exists, behaving like fish that "may not notice that they are immersed in water, let alone the dynamics of the stream they live in, because they have become habituated to swimming in a current that has always been there." Perceptions of fairness, he concedes, "can be based entirely on habit or history." Livingston proposes what he calls the PRESS system to inspire positive change: Problem awareness, Root cause analysis, Empathy, Strategy, and Sacrifice. This rubric informs the discussion questions that end each of the sections, making the book useful for business, social, or educational groups as well as for individual readers. Racism, Livingston believes, is a "solvable problem." A cogent, hopeful contribution to an urgent issue. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review