structural advantage.” (Frankenberg, 1997) • “Beliefs, values, behaviors, habits and attitudes, which result in the unequal distribution of power and privilege.” (http://www.ucalgary.ca/cared/whiteness) • An ever-shifting category of being. • Less about your skin color and more about the benefits you receive conforming to those behaviors, values, and gestures.
• More experience managing bureaucracy • Applying for jobs (procedural) • Interviewing for jobs (behavioral) • Assumptions about working time • Structural assumptions about your future and associated preparation
relational. ‘White’ only exists in relation/opposition to other categories/locations in the racial hierarchy produced by whiteness. In defining ‘others,' whiteness defines itself.” (http://www.ucalgary.ca/cared/whiteness) • Long history of problematic issues in how information is organized. • Problems with bias in discovery systems. • Systems are built by people, so our systems are infused with bias.
a one time policy or problem to be solved. • Offloads work to library staff from historically underrepresented groups. • Devalues labor—service and mentoring colleagues doesn’t count for tenure/professional dossier. • Lack of diversity is ‘driven by problems outside our control’.
and educated parents, your native language lab was a dining table attended by parents with graduate degrees, and you went to schools full of comparably situated kids that left the schools of the other 90 if not 95 percent in the dust, and your sophisticated and financially enabled parents moved heaven and earth the moment you seemed to falter on the path to elite education, are you really so special for having arrived as delivered?” • Brian Mikulak, University of San Francisco Law School, • http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2018/05/a-retiring-lrw-professors- parting-letter-to-his-scholarly-colleagues.html
state in which even a minimum amount of racial stress becomes intolerable, triggering a range of defensive moves.” (DiAngelo, 2011) • Racism adapts over time. This is why white people can’t see it.
• Travel $ • Credit card interest • Performative gestures in wardrobe/appearance • Implied time and energy to perform for multi-day interview • Job talks should measure more than a candidate’s ability to do job talks well. • How much of a candidate’s evaluation rests on replicating whiteness?
toward a proprietary distribution method. What are your thoughts on this?” • “Brown Library values diversity, equity, and inclusion. How do you model those ideals as a [Job Title]?” • “What does accessibility mean to you?”
buying books on psychology AND necromancy because the creators of [library] classification systems thought those were basically the same and lumped them together in one section.” @marccold, via Twitter. https://twitter.com/marccold/status/1019261324164063233
this commitment through our actions and their outcomes in good conscience we should stop making the claim that we are campus communities that promote diversity, respect, and inclusion.” (Sensoy and DiAngelo, 2017) • If historically underrepresented people are consistently in your applicant pool but never get offers, why not?
ordered from a menu. • Hire for potential, not 1:1 experience. • Interrogate the roles historically underrepresented patrons and staff play in our narratives.
underrepresented colleagues to make you feel better about unpacking your –isms. Growth requires discomfort. It’s painful but not nearly as difficult as dealing with structures of whiteness all day, or being asked if you’re “the diversity hire." • Talk to other white people.