The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Publishing lags after pledge to diversity

White workers still made up 72.5% of the book business in 2023.

- Alexandra Alter and Elizabeth A. Harris

More than three years after nationwide protests over racial inequality led publishers to promise they would reshape their overwhelmi­ngly white industry, a survey shows that they made little progress toward creating a more diverse publishing workforce.

White workers made up 72.5% of the book business in 2023, according to a new report from the publishing house Lee & Low. That marks a slight decrease from 2019, when the survey found that white people accounted for 76% of publishing industry employees. In 2015, that figure was 79%.

These changes are hardly the transforma­tion many hoped for, and are likely to ignite debate about whether publishing companies have faltered in their pledge to prioritize racial diversity.

The slow pace of progress reflects what many in the book world say are entrenched structural and cultural problems.

“Publishers went out of their way to embrace diversity, equity and inclusion practices, but that intensity seems to be on the wane these days,” said Erroll McDonald, vice president and executive editor of Alfred A. Knopf, who has worked in the industry for 46 years and is one of the few Black executives in publishing. “Despite all the talk of imminent change, that the industry was going through a revolution and it would look completely different in five or 10 years, that has proven not to be true.”

But Jason Low, the publisher and an owner of Lee & Low Books, a children’s book publisher focused on diversity, said that while change has come slowly, there is reason for optimism.

“We are consistent­ly moving in the right direction, maybe not as quickly as we’d like,” said Low, who was a lead author on the report along with Laura M. Jiménez, a professor at Boston University who specialize­s in children’s literature. “I’m actually quite pleased and hopeful.”

The survey comes as political backlash to diversity, equity and inclusion programs has spread across the country. Critics say that measuring diversity by looking at race and ethnicity, as this survey does, creates an incentive for companies to favor candidates of color for certain jobs, potentiall­y bypassing white applicants.

Companies are weighing the possibilit­y of lawsuits, some business leaders have criticized the efforts, and many states have considered or passed laws that target diversity programs.

“Trying to create more space for inclusions, for others, it’s a battle,” said Linda Duggins, a longtime publishing executive who is on the board of the National Book Club Conference, which brings together Black authors and readers from around the country.

Lee & Low’s survey found that the percentage of Black people was virtually unchanged from 2019 to 2023 — around 5% — while the percentage of Latino employees fell from 6% to 4.6%.

The greatest increase was in the number of biracial and multiracia­l employees, which grew to 8.4% from 3%.

To create its report, Lee & Low commission­ed a survey of more than 190 companies, including large and smaller publishing houses, university presses, literary agencies and review journals, and analyzed responses from more than 8,640 people. (In addition to race, the survey queried employees about age, gender, sexual orientatio­n, disability, their work location and which department they work in.)

The data is not exhaustive, and the report says that each iteration of the survey, conducted every four years, includes a “much larger participan­t pool,” which could affect the data. But Lee & Low’s survey is the only broad, industrywi­de analysis of diversity in the publishing industry’s workforce.

Since making pledges to increase diversity three years ago, most of the biggest publishing companies have made a concerted push to recruit and publish more people of color. But it can take years, or even decades, for people to work their way up to a high-level editorial position where they oversee book acquisitio­ns.

The lack of diversity is even more pronounced in publishing’s leadership. In 2023, white people held 76.7% of executive positions, a percentage that has barely budged since 2019, when 78% of executives were white.

Many in the industry say that while some progress has been made since 2020, there have also been setbacks. Some prominent Black editors have quit the business. Literary agents say publishers’ appetite for books that examine race and racism has dwindled. And while many publishers promised to address the stark racial disparity among authors they publish, the literary landscape still skews heavily toward white writers.

“Publishing houses and institutio­ns within this industry are not set up for people of color,” Duggins said. “You’re bucking up against really entrenched cultures.”

Diversity rush

The book world’s overwhelmi­ng whiteness has long been apparent, but it became a focal point in 2020, when Black writers and profession­als shared simmering frustratio­ns about the industry’s track record for hiring and retaining employees of color, and for its treatment of nonwhite authors.

In response, major publishing houses promised action. Some created new imprints devoted to books by writers of color and set internal diversity goals, hiring and promoting editors and publishers from diverse racial background­s. Many editors rushed to publish more titles by nonwhite authors.

While some of those titles sold well, others floundered, leading certain publishers to conclude that the market was saturated.

“There was this rush: ‘I need diverse authors, I need diverse authors,’” said Regina Brooks, founder and chief executive of Serendipit­y Literary Agency in New York, who has worked in publishing for 30 years. “Because publishers weren’t acquiring smartly, the sales on those books didn’t meet up with the kind of advances they were offering.”

“It wasn’t that these books were bad books,” she added. “They were just books that the publishing industry didn’t have the internal structure to sell.”

Some current and former publishing executives from underrepre­sented background­s say that when they were brought on, their companies seemed to welcome the perspectiv­e they offered. But once they were in place, they found it difficult to make changes or acquire different kinds of books. They might be approved to bid on a project — but not enough to make a deal. Or they might acquire titles by authors of color and get little support from marketing and sales, so the books failed to find an audience.

Low starting salaries have also hindered efforts to recruit workers from a variety of background­s. Publishing is often an apprentice­ship business, where people start as assistants and work their way up. But salaries at the five biggest publishing houses generally start at about $50,000 a year. These salaries are an improvemen­t over pay a few years ago, but they still deter many potential hires who do not have additional sources of financial support.

Corporate diversity efforts have also have also come under political pressure. A string of lawsuits challengin­g the legality of corporate DEI efforts followed a ruling from the Supreme Court last year that barred colleges from using race as a criterion in admissions; the issue’s political volatility has made it harder for companies to set targets for the racial makeup of their companies.

Carrie Bloxson, who joined Hachette Book Group in 2021 as the company’s chief diversity officer, said that after the Supreme Court ruling, Hachette moved away from using the country’s racial demographi­cs as a quantitati­ve benchmark. (According to census data released in 2021, white people accounted for 58% of the U.S. population in 2020.) Instead, they aim to have a pool of candidates that is inclusive racially but also takes into account other factors, like candidates’ economic and education background­s.

Bloxson said Hachette has gotten more diverse — according to a report the company released last spring, people of color made up 36.4% of its staff in 2022, an increase of 2.5% since 2021. But among the company’s top editors and publishers, change has been slower, she said.

“Once you get to the senior levels, it’s still super white,” she said.

In 2020, Krishan Trotman, then an executive editor at Hachette, started a new imprint at the company called Legacy Lit, with a focus on works by writers of color. The imprint has seen some success, with titles like Antonia Hylton’s book “Madness,” which recently became a New York Times bestseller.

Trotman — who is one of two Black publishers out of 25 at the company — said the lack of diversity among top executives remains an obstacle throughout the industry.

“It has been harder for brown folks in publishing to find mentors at the executive level,” she said.

At the same time, though, she has seen some of the company’s diversity initiative­s start to pay off, she said.

“When I walk around the office, I do see more brown faces,” she said, “which brings me joy.”

 ?? SEPTEMBER DAWN BOTTOMS/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Erroll McDonald, vice president and executive editor of Knopf and Pantheon.
SEPTEMBER DAWN BOTTOMS/NEW YORK TIMES Erroll McDonald, vice president and executive editor of Knopf and Pantheon.
 ?? SIMBARASHE CHA/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Krishan Trotman started a new imprint called Legacy Lit.
SIMBARASHE CHA/NEW YORK TIMES Krishan Trotman started a new imprint called Legacy Lit.
 ?? JAMES ESTRIN/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Linda Duggins, a longtime publishing executive who is on the board of the National Book Club Conference.
JAMES ESTRIN/NEW YORK TIMES Linda Duggins, a longtime publishing executive who is on the board of the National Book Club Conference.
 ?? JOSHUA RASHAAD MCFADDEN/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Regina Brooks, the founder and chief executive of Serendipit­y Literary Agency.
JOSHUA RASHAAD MCFADDEN/NEW YORK TIMES Regina Brooks, the founder and chief executive of Serendipit­y Literary Agency.

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