Behind the polished galleries and carefully worded mission statements lies a world the public rarely sees.
In Unseen Hand: How Power and Corruption Shape Our Museums, museum professional and whistleblower Katherine Fisher reveals the quiet machinery that governs cultural institutions-the power struggles, ethical failures, and subtle acts of retaliation that unfold far from public view. Drawing on two decades inside the nonprofit museum sector, she shows how corruption often begins not with dramatic scandals, but with the slow, steady normalization of behavior that erodes integrity from within. Fisher traces how leaders are elevated for loyalty rather than competence, how restructuring becomes a tool to silence dissent, and how collections suffer when budget decisions prioritize appearances over preservation. She exposes the ease with which board politics can override mission, and how financial manipulation survives behind layers of bureaucratic politeness. She writes candidly about the ways museums rely on volunteer labor to mask chronic understaffing-creating an imbalance that leaves employees overextended, exhausted, and expected to endure it quietly. Yet Unseen Hand is more than an expos . It is also a portrait of the people who refuse to walk away: archivists, educators, collections staff, volunteers, and frontline workers who keep showing up because the work matters. Their resilience is woven through every chapter. Fisher honors their commitment while demanding accountability from the institutions that depend on them. Unflinching, timely, and grounded in lived experience, Unseen Hand invites readers into the back rooms, boardrooms, and storage spaces where the real decisions are made. It is essential reading for museum professionals, nonprofit workers, board members, and anyone invested in ethical stewardship and public trust. Readers of Museum Governance by Marie Malaro, Foul Play in the Nonprofit Sector by Kevin Kearns, and The Routledge Companion to Museum Ethics will find Unseen Hand a powerful, deeply human complement-pairing insider testimony with a clear-eyed examination of how power, ethics, and accountability will shape the future of America's museums.