Issue 25(2)
Institutional
Racism in Higher Education.
(2004). Ian Law; Deborah
Phillips; and Laura Turney, (Eds.). Great Britain: Trentham Books
Limited. Distributed by Stylus Publishing, 180 pp.
ISBN # 1-85856-313-5.
Review
By: Chrissy L.
Davis
Title
III Activity Director/Student Success Specialist
Seward
County
Community
College, Liberal Kansas
"Institutional
racism is not the proverbial grit in the machine that conventional
programmes of race awareness training can remove. Rather, it is
organic in nature and function and grows in cunning and resilience
with each challenge it successfully overcomes" (p. 28). As I read
the book this quote caught my attention and stayed with me throughout
the text because I began to associate the continued existence
of racism with one word: A
DAP TABILITY.
Although each author in this text
expresses his or her message on the subject of racism through
a different lens, their words can be captured within one theme:
institutional racism is like a chameleon; professionals in the
Higher Education arena must be aware of the color of the chameleon.
This metaphor and the diversification within the articles showcase
the complexity of racism.
Institutional
racism has managed to persist in organizational systems, including
institutions of Higher Education irrespective of many years of
change. The authors -- each with experience at institutions of
Higher Education in the United
Kingdom -- tackle this complicated
and taboo subject through a collection of articles. The density
of racism is prevalent in the articles; the content of each goes
beyond the surface to present a degree of "realism" digestible
by all readers. The book is written in phases that move the reader
from "here is the problem" to "here are some solutions" to subjugate
racism.
The editors wrote an interesting
article entitled, Tackling Institutional Racism in Higher
Education: An Antiracist Toolkit (based on a Web resource:
see reference below), that challenges the reader to shift from
discussion to practical application. This "antiracist" toolkit
can be beneficial as a professional development instrument to
raise awareness. It also can be modified to target campus-related
problems and "treatments" and thus stimulate dialogue between
advisors and their advisees regarding racism and institutional
barriers. I believe that academic advisors are gatekeepers with
the responsibility to talk openly with our advisees about real
life matters (such as racial issues). If nothing else, the "antiracist"
toolkit can be used to enhance academic advisors cross-cultural
communication styles.
One
limitation for North American advisors is that research and information
included is based on institutions in the United
Kingdom . In addition, the
"antiracist" toolkit is not designed specifically for staff-student
relations; thus, its focus is not academic advising. Despite these
two limitations the book can be used as a reference and serve
as a guide for academic advisors examining institutional policies
and procedures. I frequently recommend this book to academic advisors
and professionals in the domain of Higher Education.
Reference
Turney,
Laura, Law, Ian & Phillips, Debbie.
(2002). Institutional Racism in Higher Education Toolkit
Project: Building the Anti-Racist HEI. Retrieved on March
16, 2005 from http://www.leeds.ac.uk/CERS/toolkit/toolkit.htm.