Clara Denise West: The Collision, Kartoniert / Broschiert
The Collision
- White Male Fragility Meets Black Female Resilience--Lessons Learned
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- Einband:
- Kartoniert / Broschiert
- Sprache:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9781892313126
- Artikelnummer:
- 12669202
- Umfang:
- 448 Seiten
- Gewicht:
- 594 g
- Maße:
- 229 x 152 mm
- Stärke:
- 25 mm
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 11.4.2026
- Hinweis
-
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Klappentext
What happens when excellence collides with a system never designed to include you?
For fourteen years, Dr. Clara Denise West documented that collision with engineering precision.
Five degrees. Twenty-seven years of federal service. First Black woman to complete a Master's degree in Electrical Engineering with a concentration in Optics while working full-time at NASA. Expertise in radar target identification.
The credentials opened the door. They did not prevent what happened next.
The Collision is the account of what unfolds when a Black woman engineer enters elite federal institutions-NASA Marshall Space Flight Center and the U. S. Army Aviation & Missile Command-and approaches positions of authority the system was never designed to grant her.
Performance metrics shifted after she exceeded them. Selection criteria evolved when she met them. The path to becoming the first Black subject matter expert in strategic defense was systematically obstructed through mechanisms designed to appear procedural, objective, merit-based.
She documented everything.
Union grievances. EEO complaints. Appeals. Fourteen years of evidence entered into federal proceedings. Testimony before the House Judiciary Committee in 2002 that contributed to the passage of the No FEAR Act, landmark legislation protecting federal employees from discrimination.
She never won a case. Not one.
But she built an unassailable record.
The Collision reveals the mechanics of institutional resistance when proximity to authority triggers recalibration. How organizations claim to reward merit while managing it to preserve hierarchical order. Why credentials that open doors for some produce containment for others.
This is not a story of overcoming. It is documentation of what persists.
Dr. West did not break through barriers. She mapped them-with the same precision she brought to analyzing radar signatures. The PhD in Systems Engineering that the institution required, then rendered irrelevant. The research contributions made invisible. The expertise acknowledged privately, denied publicly.
As president of RAM-Redstone Area Minority Employees Association-she watched it dissolve. She survived a stairwell shove that could have killed her. She saw her health pay the price her cases could not extract.
She retired in 2012-not because the system changed, but because her body could no longer withstand what her documentation proved the system would never acknowledge.
The Collision is written for those who sense that institutional resistance does not behave according to stated principles of merit. For those who have pursued every credential required, only to discover that proximity itself provokes recalibration.
For Black women in STEM who recognize these mechanisms. For anyone who has watched excellence collide with structures designed to contain it.
The record exists.
Not because it produced accountability.
But because fourteen years of engineering precision, applied to institutional behavior, reveals what systems require to remain invisible: the silence of those positioned to see what others cannot.
Dr. Clara Denise West refused that silence.
The Collision is what happens when documentation meets a system designed to absorb it-and the record persists anyway.