Dr. Stacey Patton is an award-winning journalist, author, college professor and nationally recognized child advocate whose work focuses on the elimination of corporal punishment in homes and schools. Her writings on education, child welfare, and race have been published by the New York Times, Washington Post, Al Jazeera, The Chronicle of Higher Education, NewsOne, Black Enterprise, and other outlets.
“Stacey Patton lays bare—with searing text and haunting images—the unspoken script behind ‘the talk’ Black parents give their children about surviving a world where driving or walking while Black still carries danger. She traces how European child-rearing traditions helped create the very cultural logic that made the abuse of Black children seem permissible, even justified. As Patton shows, white parents once believed harsh discipline protected their own children from evil; that same belief system ultimately helped fuel the racism, exploitation, and terror inflicted on Black children and their families. This book is essential reading—an unflinching examination of the roots of racialized harm and the urgent need to confront it.” —Mary Frances Berry, author of History Teaches Us to Resist: How Progressive Movements Have Succeeded in Challenging Times