The Little Book of Everyday Bias

How Invisible Divisions Quietly Shape Judgment, Access, and Power in India | Judgment | Access | Power
104 Seiten, Taschenbuch
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Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

Most books treat bias as something loud.Obvious.Intentional.This one doesn't.The Little Book of Everyday Bias examines how judgment quietly breaks down in ordinary decisions-long before hostility, debate, or moral failure appear.Bias, as shown here, rarely feels wrong.It feels efficient.Practical.Reasonable.It hides inside shortcuts: - Familiar backgrounds- Comfortable signals- "Merit," "fit," "trust," and "risk"- Decisions made quickly because they feel safeThis book is not about bad people.It's about how systems reward speed over accuracy-and how that tradeoff distorts judgment.Across hiring, education, housing, healthcare, finance, leadership, and daily interactions, people are often sorted before they are evaluated.Not denied outright.Delayed.Observed longer.Trusted later.Each moment feels minor.Together, they decide outcomes.The book follows a clear progression: - How people are sorted before interaction- How bias disguises itself as merit- How trust and care quietly replace evaluation- How access narrows without confrontation- What this costs-personally and systemicallyThere are no villains here.No slogans.No calls to action.Only mechanisms.You'll see how: - Comfort is mistaken for intelligence- Familiarity replaces evidence- Confidence is rewarded before competence- Explanations protect shortcuts after decisions are madeThis is not a self-help book.It won't motivate you.It won't tell you what to do.It does something rarer.It slows judgment.The final chapter introduces a single restraint-a private pause that interrupts bias without accusation, ideology, or performance. Not to make you "better," but to make you more precise.If you've ever: - Wondered why capable people disappear quietly- Felt decisions were "reasonable" but wrong- Trusted explanations that sounded smart but aged badly- Noticed that nothing felt unfair-yet outcomes stayed unevenThis book will feel uncomfortably familiar.It doesn't argue.It exposes.And once seen, these patterns are hard to unsee.The Little Book of Everyday Bias is for readers who value judgment over certainty, clarity over comfort, and restraint over outrage.Because the most dangerous decisions are rarely reckless.They're the ones that feel sensible at the time.

Regards, Nishant Chandravanshi