“The Black Ceiling is a must-read for anyone interested in understanding barriers to success for Black professionals working at predominantly White firms in law, consulting, and finance. Woodson shows how racial discomfort sometimes shadows Black professionals’ experiences, through social alienation and stigma anxiety. In doing so, Woodson goes beyond explanations that rely solely on instances of racial discrimination to explain how social, cultural, and psychological processes also shape work experiences. Woodson also identifies the route to more positive experiences at work for Black professionals. The book is a compelling read and is sure to become an instant classic!”
— Natasha Warikoo, author of Race at the Top: Asian Americans and Whites in Pursuit of the American Dream in Suburban Schools
“The Black Ceiling is terrific, both in its observations and in its selection of themes. The solutions Woodson puts forward are eminently sensible.”
— Devon W. Carbado, author of Unreasonable: Black Lives, Police Power, and the Fourth Amendment
“The Black Ceiling provides a desperately needed and beautifully written account of the lives of Black professionals in top law firms, investment banks, and consulting firms. Woodson powerfully shows how, despite these firms’ publicly stated commitments to increasing racial diversity, inside their doors familiarity with White, upper-middle-class culture serves as vital currency for accessing plum assignments, necessary on-the-job training, favorable performance evaluations, close relationships with partners, and ultimately promotions. The book should be mandatory reading for employees in elite professional service firms and the students they recruit.”
— Lauren A. Rivera, author of Pedigree: How Elite Students Get Elite Jobs
“Woodson delivers an amazingly nuanced and balanced portrait of life as a Black professional working in the high-powered service industries. I frequently saw myself in his descriptions and marveled at his ability to articulate the experiences of Black professionals across the spectrum. While Woodson’s assertions will be familiar to almost every Black professional, it is his gift for explaining the complex factors that lead to his conclusions that makes this book stand out as a must-read. Woodson also offers concrete, practical solutions to the issues he raises that are sometimes counterintuitive but always insightful.”
— Ronald Machen, chair of WilmerHale’s Litigation and Controversy Department and former US Attorney for the District of Columbia
“In this well-researched book, Woodson identifies a significant and widespread consequence of the country’s racial divide. Mandatory reading for both junior professionals and senior management alike.”
— Kirkus Reviews
"A useful contribution to the literature on race and work. One of the most valuable aspects of Woodson’s book is his attention to the ways Black professional workers in these spaces anticipate and react to the (often justified) expectation that they will be marginalized or face racial stereotyping in these work environments."
— Social Forces
“Woodson’s The Black Ceiling is a masterful and nuanced exploration of the persistent challenges that Black professionals face in elite workplaces. Woodson seamlessly weaves three levels of analysis to provide a new explanation for Black professionals’ organizational mobility (or lack thereof), which screams of realism without feeling overly deterministic. By bridging individual experiences of stigma anxiety and social alienation with organizational and societal dynamics, Woodson offers a multi-dimensional framework that deepens our understanding of workplace inequality. It is essential reading for students and scholars of workplace inequality, HR professionals, and organizational leaders seeking to understand and address the structural and interpersonal barriers that Black professionals face in elite firms.”
— Administrative Science Quarterly
“Yielding rich insights from both interviewees and his own valuable firsthand experience as a Black man working in a leading law firm, Woodson has much to offer academic and real-world audiences alike. . . . The Black Ceiling is both academically rigorous and practically relevant. . . . Woodson outlines much-needed concrete steps that both firms and Black professionals can take to address racial discomfort—steps that are particularly needed when firms steeped in whiteness have a tendency to ignore or whitewash racial politics.”
— American Journal of Sociology