The drama-free workplace – How you can prevent unconscious bias, sexual harassment, ethics lapses and inspire a healthy culture

I had many alleluia moments as I worked my way through this book; it is thoughtful, practical, and translatable into environments where workplace conflict is present and prevalent. The Drama-Free Workplace offers the reader insight into why conflict exists and guides us on how to address toxic environments differently to encourage a more appropriate approach.

The book is practical, focusing on what can be done in organisational environments to improve the current state of things, notably it spotlights on our obsession with the use of archaic policy design to try and address conflict situations and reflects on real examples of toxic behaviours that we all will have seen in our working world at some stage.

Perez has a background in employment litigation but still cries out for a humanistic approach to resolving workplace conflict rather than reverting to strict policy wording. She consistently makes the point that the use of legal language in our dealings with conflict can escalate matters into a combative process, thus ensuring ongoing drama when a more emotionally
intelligent response would have avoided it.   

This book is written in an American context and briefly touches on American legislation but it is not enough to render the book irrelevant if you are in another country, nor is it too distracting from the main point of the narrative.

The close of the book becomes a little clunky to read but due primarily to the numerous practical examples and references to how to change policy or process wording to serve organisations better.

I enjoyed that it wasn’t an indulgent statement about how workplaces need to be different in our modern times without substantiating how it can be made to work in the here and now.

For any HR professional working at the sharp end of employee relations issues, or businesses that are reflecting on their approach to governance, it is a must read.

C-J Green, Founder – Tovip Ltd

Published by Wiley

Read more

Latest News

Read More

What happens if you lose in small claims court

3 September 2025

Business Transformation

3 September 2025

What employees really think about becoming an employee-owned company

Employee ownership is on the rise in the UK. With over 1,800 employee-owned businesses now operating across sectors as diverse as manufacturing, healthcare and professional...

Employee Engagement

3 September 2025

How to deliver bad news and get a good outcome

Delivering bad news is never easy and the moment that we accept and own that we will be delivering bad news, our amygdala (emotional brain)...
Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

Sheffield Hallam University – Directorate of Human Resources and Organisational Development – Employee Relations TeamSalary: £39,906 to £44,746 per annum depending on experience (Grade 7)

Ravensbourne University London – People & CultureSalary: From £76,162 per annum

University of Plymouth – Human Resources – HR Business PartneringSalary: £35,608 to £38,784 per annum (Grade 6)

City & Guilds of London Art SchoolSalary: Competitive

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE