August 20, 2021

Rebeccca Walton, Associate Professor and Associate Dean of CHaSS, Publishes New Book on Technical Communication and Social Justice

Bridging the Gap Between Caring About Social Justice and Practicing It

Many people experience a disconnect between caring about social justice and knowing how to implement it in their own workplace. Rebecca Walton, USU English associate professor in the Technical Communication and Rhetoric program and associate dean in CHaSS, recently co-edited a book titled Equipping Technical Communicators for Social Justice Work: Theories, Methodologies, and Pedagogies, which she hopes will help people bridge that gap.  

The edited collection, published in June 2021, was co-edited with Godwin Y. Agboka, professor of technical and professional communication at the University of Houston–Downtown. 

Walton said Agdoka first pitched the idea to co-edit a collection, and in brainstorming ideas for the book, they both recognized many people want to be more inclusive in their workplace practices and policies but aren’t quite sure how to go about it.  

“We realized that people are becoming more and more interested in social justice and in learning how to do their jobs in a way that is just and equitable, but they don’t know how to translate theory into practice,” Walton said. 

To Walton, the format of this book is one aspect that makes it powerful. Because it is an edited collection, the book includes diverse perspectives of many influential scholars and offers actionable advice on topics such as how to design courses that help students recognize systems of oppression at work in their own lives and communities. The book is divided into four sections: centering marginality in professional practice, conducting collaborative research, teaching critical analysis, and teaching critical advocacy.   

The first section on centering marginality in professional practice suggests strategies and tools that can be applied by people with a variety of positionalities to prioritize the experiences and expertise of marginalized groups in workplace practices, behaviors, and policies. For example, the first chapter was written by five women of color scholars, detailing their experiences in academia, including some of the trials that multiply marginalized professionals encounter in the workplace. Their chapter presents two sets of strategies for academics committed to social justice: one set for multiply marginalized scholars and one for white accomplices.  

“Although Dr. Agboka and I are experts in social justice in our field of technical communication,” Walton said. “the two of us could never write such a comprehensive, practical, equipping book alone.” 

Walton is grateful to those who contributed their experiences and research to this collection.  

“The brilliance of the book comes from the authors who wrote the chapters,” Walton said.  

Equipping Technical Communicators for Social Justice Work can be purchased at Amazon

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