Rashmi Chordiya (She | Her) is an associate professor of public administration at Seattle University’s Department of Public Affairs and Nonprofit Leadership, USA. Her research focuses on bridging critical academic scholarship and social justice movement visions and theories to advance the theory and praxis of liberatory justice in public service. She approaches diversity and social justice work from an embodied lens that is traumainformed, repair and healing-centered, and compassionately centering the margins. Her peer-reviewed journal articles are published in prestigious public administration journals. Meghna Sabharwal is a National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) Fellow and a professor in the public and nonprofit management program, as well as the Associate Provost of Faculty Success at the University of Texas at Dallas, USA. Her extensive research portfolio centers around public human resources management with a particular focus on workforce diversity, equity and inclusion, high skilled immigration, and comparative public human resources. She is the editor-in-chief of the Review of Public Personnel Administration. She is the recipient of several national and international awards.
“This book looks anew at old problems. For the optimist, the book shows the way forward. For the realist, it acknowledges hurdles to be jumped. For the pessimist, it explains liberatory precepts and makes them accessible for discussion.” Mary E. Guy, University of Colorado Distinguished Professor, USA “Deep and accessible. Gentle and courageous. This book inspires a renewed commitment to the human-centered public service our communities need and deserve. With loving clarity and great care, Chordiya and Sabharwal illuminate a path for each of us - and the institutions we steward - to see our need for connection, transformation, trust, wholeness, and healing as the building blocks of the future of public service. This uplifting and exciting contribution is a gift!” Adana Protonentis, MPA, Co-Owner and Director of Liberatory Learning, Kindred Consulting “Rarely does a book come along that has the power to change everything you know about the public sector. But Chordiya and Sabharwal have done just that. With their thoughtful, thorough, and meaningful words, they offer us the liberatory public service as a way to transform our organizations and ourselves. This is a must read for public servants, students, and faculty in public administration, political science, and criminal justice.” Stephanie Dolamore, Maryland Developmental Disabilities Council, Maryland, USA “While we’ve made a lot of progress in studying diversity, this amazing work by Chordiya and Sabharwal is exactly what public administration needs right now to move our field down the path to embracing justice in our teaching and research. It will be transformative, and I cannot wait to adopt it in class.” Jessica E. Sowa, Joseph R. Biden, Jr. School of Public Policy & Administration, University of Delaware, USA “Chordiya and Sabharwal have written a necessary text at a time of great need for those of us who care about good and just governance. Their book envisions the kind of change our students crave. The pages are brave, well-researched, and reasonable, and will infuse life into the most important debates facing public administration today.” Nuri Heckler, co-Editor-in-Chief, Administrative Theory & Praxis