Learn how to secure a place at the professional table for Black, Latinx, and other marginalized groups
In Upper Hand:?The Future of Work for the Rest of Us, celebrated Founder and CEO of The Plug, Sherrell Dorsey, delivers a personal and eye-opening exploration of how to ensure that marginalized communities aren't left behind as technology continues its inexorable march forward. In the book, readers will learn to think about how we can strategically shape the coming decade to include Black and Brown communities.
Upper Hand offers guidelines, insights, and frameworks for navigating the new world of work that is dominated by Silicon Valley-rooted technologies, inaccessible networks, and constant automation that continues to slash jobs in the Black and Latinx population. You'll find ways to:
- Help families and community leaders design clear pathways to understanding alternatives to obsolescence
- Thrive in an ever-changing, tech-driven economy that is beginning to leave people of color behind
- Embrace new strategies that guarantee a place for Black and brown people in the new economy
The startling and insightful discussion in Upper Hand will earn it a place in the libraries of families, teachers, community advocates, workforce development leaders, professionals of color, as well as anyone interested in learning how to distribute the benefits of the new tech economy to those historically left out.
PRAISE FOR UPPER HAND
Upper Hand is a long overdue call-to-action that centers communities of color in the future of work by an entrepreneur that has done the work to ensure Black and Brown voices are visible when we think about the future of business. The industry at large can take notes about how to ensure underestimated communities are not left behind."
-ARLAN HAMILTON, Founder of BackStage Capital, Author of It's About Damn Time
"With style and grace, humor, frankness, and justified audacity, Upper Hand tells many stories about our relationship to technology specifically, and the future of work more broadly. Fascinating stories of family migrations and the serendipities of finding spaces where we can thrive. Riveting tales recounting lives lived and built through the magic of software and freedom to loose our entrepreneurial spirits. These are refreshing stories from the right side of the digital divide-ones rarely known and sparingly told because they powerfully challenge persistent narratives about Black and Brown people's intellectual, cultural, and technological deficiencies.
On the one hand, Upper Hand reminds us of the many ways that Black and Brown folk have always pushed the cutting edge of technological innovation, whether that takes the form of hardware, software, or transforming spaces of life and work in the pursuit of our own happiness. Perhaps more importantly, the book offers the world a powerful vision of the future where the capacity to aspire, the space to imagine, the freedom to create, and the opportunity to realize dreams are the norm for the rest of us. This vision of the future is all the more compelling given all that this book reminds us about our previous and persistent efforts to create different and better futures for new generations of us."
-CHARLTON MCILWAIN, Vice Provost, Faculty Engagement and Development, NYU Center for Faculty Advancement, Professor, Media, Culture, and Communication