Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Please, no more studies about getting women to the top
Please, no more studies about getting women to the top I hate to dis Catalyst because they have provided great research to support women in the work place. But heres a bit from their most recent study: Most large U.S. companies have made scant progress in advancing womento leadership and top-paying positions over the past decade. DUH!!!! Its clear at this point that women are basically stuck on their climb up the corporate ladder. In general, climbing the corporate ladder to the top requires giving up your personal life in order to serve the corporation. And research has shown that if women are willing to give up having kids, (or at least have a stay-at-home husband,) they can climb as well as men. But really, why fight to get more women up a ladder that is basically dysfunctional? We should, instead, focus on helping men to get off the ladder. And then helping both men and women to get meaningful and rewarding work both outside and inside the home. The Third Path is a nonprofit that addresses these issues. It helps people redesign work to better accommodate family, community and other life passions. The interview I did with the founder, Jessica DeGroot , was truly inspiring and made me think about all the possibilities for being a social change leader with my own family. Another way to address the issues of creating meaningful work inside and outside the home is to go to court. No joke. Lisa Belkin reports in todays New York Times that a new category of discrimination suit being won is a suit in which plaintiffs claim discrimination at work because they are giving care at home. Mary Still, professor at University of California Hastings College of the Law, coined the term family responsibilities discrimination, and both men and women are winning their cases in this area: Hooray.
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