Reflections on the continuing denial of the centrality of “race” in management and organization studies

2021 
Purpose: The purpose of this article is to share reflections about the progress toward the inclusion of race as a core analytical concept in MOS since the article The emperor has no clothes: Rewriting “race in organizations” was published in the Academy of Management Review twenty-nine years ago Design/methodology/approach: I critically reflect upon the past and future of race in management and organizations studies drawing upon my own subjective position in what has transpired over the past twenty-nine years Specifically, I reflect upon the past and future of the study of race in organizations and also offer some recommendations for theories that may help advance it as a core theoretical concept in MOS drawing Findings: Dethroning the “emperor” remains a challenge There has been a lack of significant progress toward positioning race as a core analytical concept in MOS There is still much to do to elevate race to a significant analytical concept in MOS Post-colonial theory, whiteness and the literature on the sociology of race may assist scholars in making progress Research limitations/implications: I readily acknowledge that my subjective position as the author of an article declaring the significance of race in MOS and as a Black woman whose life and career has unfolded in a world of systemic racism shape my reflections It may be time for to consider whether positioning race as a core analytical concept in MOS can be achieved under the diversity paradigm Perhaps it is time for a new field of study – race in organizations Practical implications: Theorizing race in organizations is central to undoing the continuing effects of racism Otherwise, it will be difficult to develop strategies that get to the roots of racial inequality in organizations Social implications: The confluence of resurgent white supremacy, the stark global racial inequalities revealed by the COVID-19 pandemic and calls to end anti-Blackness and systemic racism by the Black Lives Matter Movement underscore the immense importance of race in every aspect of society including organizations Originality/value: This essay is my first reflections on what has transpired since the publication of the article The essay reveals my insights and experiences of writing the article and why rewriting race into MOS is a much larger project than the one envisioned in 1992 © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited
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