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Title: Women


1
Womens Rights
  • You don't have to be anti-man to be pro-woman. 
    Jane Galvin Lewis

2
  • The emotional, sexual, and psychological
    stereotyping of females begins when the doctor
    says, "It's a girl."  Shirley Chisholm

3
  • It was we, the people not we, the white male
    citizens nor yet we, the male citizens but we,
    the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men,
    their rights and nothing more women, their
    rights and nothing less.  Susan B. Anthony

4
  • I've yet to be on a campus where most women
    weren't worrying about some aspect of combining
    marriage, children, and a career.  I've yet to
    find one where many men were worrying about the
    same thing.  Gloria Steinem

5
  • How good does a female athlete have to be before
    we just call her an athlete?  Author Unknown

6
History and Womens Movements in the United States
7
First Wave (1840-1925)
  • 1848 First Womens Rights Convention Seneca
    Falls Convention, New York
  • August 26, 1920 19th Amendment Granting women
    the right to vote

8
Second Wave (1960-1995)
  • Radical Feminism Womens Liberation Movement
  • Reproductive Rights
  • Myth of the feminists burned bras in 1968 to
    protest the Miss America pageant

9
Continued
  • The Guerilla Girls
  • Betty Friedan
  • The Feminine Mystique
  • 1972 Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) and Title lX

10
Sisters of 77
  • Create a national plan of action towards gender
    equality, which would then be given to the
    president and Congress.

11
The Equal Rights Amendment
  • Equality of the rights under the law shall not
    be denied or abridged by the United States or by
    any State on account of sex

12
  • Section 2 The Congress shall have the power to
    enforce, by appropriate legislation, the
    provisions of this article.
  • Section 3 This amendment shall take effect two
    years after the date of ratification.

13
States Yet to Ratify the ERA
  • In order for the ERA to pass, it had to be
    ratified by 38 states. Indiana was the 35th and
    final state to ratify the amendment in 1977.

14
As of March 2005, 15 U.S. states have not
ratified the ERA
  • AlabamaArizonaArkansasFloridaGeorgiaIllinois
    LouisianaMississippi
  • Missouri
  • NevadaN.CarolinaOklahomaSouth
    CarolinaUtahVirginia

15
Third Wave (1990s)
  • Women of different ethnicities, abilities and
    disabilities, classes, appearances, and sexual
    orientations

16
  • Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972
  • in 2002 the Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in
    Education Act in honor of its principal author

17
  • United States law enacted on June 23, 1972. The
    law states "No person in the United States
    shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from
    participation in, be denied the benefits of, or
    be subjected to discrimination under any
    education program or activity receiving Federal
    financial assistance..."1

18
  • Although the most prominent aspect of Title IX is
    its impact on high school and collegiate
    athletics, the original statute made no explicit
    mention of athletics.2

19
Women in the Workplace
  • Glass Walls Glass Ceilings

20
Gender Stereotypes in the Workplace
  • Women
  • Sex Object
  • Mother
  • Child
  • Iron Maiden
  • Men
  • Sturdy Oak
  • Fighter
  • Bread-winner

21
Sex Object
  • Judging based on appearance and actions
  • Sexual harassment

22
Mother
  • Have or plan to have children perceived as not
    serious professionals
  • Emotional labor
  • Smile, listen, support, help others

23
Child
  • Not taken seriously
  • Less mature
  • Less competent / capable
  • Protecting women
  • Combat

24
Iron Maiden
  • Independent
  • Ambitious
  • Competitive
  • Tough

25
Gendered Wages
  • Equal Pay Act of 1963
  • 59 cents for every dollar men earned
  • 2000, 72 cents
  • 2004 80 cents
  • Mothers still paid less than then woman who do
    not have children

26
Obama signs Equal Pay Bill
  • January 29, 2009
  • Easier for workers to sue for discrimination on
    the job
  • Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act
  • Extends the period an employee can file a claim
    of discrimination for making less money than
    another worker doing the same job

27
  • That there are no second class citizens in our
    workplaces, and that its not just unfair and
    illegalbut bad for businessto pay someone less
    because of their gender, age, race, ethnicity,
    religion or disability

28
  • The bill is named for a woman who said she didnt
    become aware of a pay discrepancy until she
    neared the end of her career at a plant owned by
    Ohio- based Goodyear Tire Rubber Co

29
Mean Weekly Salary Men / Women
  • Physician 1,364 852
  • Attorney 1,340 974
  • College Fac. 1,038 859
  • Bus Driver 498 384
  • Cook 340 300

30
  • Weekly earnings of full time working women were
    about ¾ of mens during 2001
  • (study of earnings history of over 9,300
    Americans for over 18 years)

31
  • Even accounting for factors such as occupation,
    industry, race, marital status and job tenure,
    working women today earn an average of 80 cents
    for every dollar earned by male counterparts

32
  • Women are less likely to work a full time
    schedule and are more likely to leave the labor
    force for longer periods of time than men,
    further suppressing womens wages

33
  • Working women are penalized for their dual roles
    as wage earners and those who disproportionately
    care for home and family

34
  • Men with children get an earnings boost, women
    lose earnings
  • Men with children earn about 2 more on average
    than men without children
  • Women earn 2.5 less than women without children

35
  • Womens median earnings 638 a week
  • Mens 798
  • (Department of Labor)

36
  • Impact of wage gap is painful during our current
    economics downturn as families struggle to make
    ends meet in face of wages and job losses

37
  • Pay gap does not necessarily indicate
    discrimination

38
  • Employers pay workers who have taken time out of
    the work force less than those with more
    experience on the job, and many women work less
    for family reasons Hudson Institute

39
Differences between Salaries of Male Faculty and
Female Faculty
  • 2005, The Chronicle of Higher Education Highest
    faculty rank to the lowest across all 4-year
    institutions
  • Prof. 94,235 82,874
  • Ass. Prof 66,291 61,539
  • Lecturer 47,008 42,584

40
The Bill for Moms Services
  • What would be charged for all of the things
    typical full-time mothers do?

41
  • According to Newsweek (Mother Matters, 2005),
    the bill would come to 131,471.00 per year!
  • Cost to hire cleaning, day care, cooking,
    nursing, laundry, counseling, chauffeuring, and
    so forth

42
  • If paid, Stay at Home Moms would earn 134,121
    annually (up from 2005's salary of 131,471).
    Working Moms would earn 85,876 annually for the
    "mom job" portion of their work, in addition to
    their actual "work job" salary.

43
  • Salary.com found the job titles that best matched
    a mom's definition of her work to be (in order of
    hours spent per week) housekeeper, day care
    center teacher, cook, computer operator, laundry
    machine operator, janitor, facilities manager,
    van driver, CEO and psychologist.

44
  • New job titles that made the list in 2006 include
    psychologist, laundry machine operator, computer
    operator, and facilities manager. The job title
    of nurse fell out of the top 10 this year.

45
  • "We don't want to add fuel to the mommy-war
    fire," said Meredith Hanrahan, senior vice
    president of Salary.com Interactive. "Both moms
    struggle with keeping the house clean and moms of
    both types reported making tremendous sacrifices
    to make their children happy, healthy, and
    successful.

46
  • Stay at Home Moms give up the benefits of working
    outside the home, including extra income, title,
    and career advancement. Working Moms give up more
    sleep, time for exercise, and skip lunch to spend
    quality time nurturing and educating their
    children. In the end, both claim it was well
    worth it."

47
  • Moms work an average of 90 hours a week
  • Working Moms reported spending 44 hours per week
    at their "work job" and 49.8 hours at their "mom
    job," for a total of 93.8 hours per week. The
    Stay-at-Home Mom works 91.6 hours at her mom job.

48
  • Working Moms get less sleep
  • Working Moms reported getting only 6.4 hours of
    sleep per night, versus 6.7 for the Stay-at-Home
    Moms.

49
  • Working Moms work 7.2 hours as housekeeper,
    versus 22.1 for Stay at Home Moms
  • Taken together, the three lowest paying roles of
    housekeeper, laundry machine operator, and
    janitor represent 29 percent of the Working Mom's
    "mom job," but as much as 38 percent of the
    Stay-at-Home Mom's job, suggesting that Working
    Moms need assistance with these tasks.

50
  • "My house isn't as clean as I would like and I
    want to spend more time with my family"
  • Working Moms and Stay at Home Moms both spend
    roughly 4 hours per week nurturing the emotional
    needs of their kids in the "mom job" of
    psychologist. The big difference appears to be in
    the "mom job" of day care center teacher, with
    Stay at Home Moms reporting an average of 15.7
    hours per week and Working Moms reporting 7.2
    hours per week

51
  • Approx. 105,000 married American fathers choose
    to be stay-at-home dads- care for about 189,000
    children under the age of 15

52
  • 2 million American preschool children are cared
    for by their fathers more hours than by any other
    child care provider while their mothers are at
    work

53
  • Number of single fathers has grown to 2 million,
    up from 393,000 in 1970

54
Women in Education
  • Clearly, women have made great strides over the
    last two decades in their pursuit of college
    diplomas. Indeed, women account for 56 percent of
    college enrollment in the country, according to
    the U.S. Department of Education.

55
  • And studies have shown that women are more likely
    than men to earn bachelors degrees in every
    state, every income bracket and every racial
    group. Women earn 57 percent of all bachelors
    and 58 percent of all masters degrees.

56
  • Still, women are clearly underrepresented in
    science and engineering higher education programs
    as well as in MBA programs. Women are earning
    from one-third to half of the science and
    engineering undergraduate and graduate degrees
    and an astonishingly low 30 percent of the MBAs
    that are being awarded.

57
  • Sex Stereotypes affects self-confidence
  • Example Math and Science
  • Price Waterhouse vs Hopkins

58
  • In 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Price
    Waterhouse v. Hopkins that Title VII the main
    federal anti-discrimination statute -- prohibits
    employers from penalizing employees for failing
    to conform to the gender stereotypes associated
    with their sex. Yet, two decades later, courts
    continue to show ambivalence in sex-stereotyping
    cases.

59
  • More specifically, courts continue to uphold
    employers' dress and grooming policies that
    differentiate by sex and, in the course of doing
    so, demand that their employees adhere to the
    stereotypical appearance standards assigned to
    their sex. A recent federal court ruling, in
    Creed v. Family Express Corporation, involving a
    transsexual employee, illustrates and repeats
    the mistake of many other courts that have
    refused to see these policies as a form of
    illegal sex-stereotyping.

60
  • In Price Waterhouse, the plaintiff, Ann Hopkins,
    was denied partnership in an accounting firm, at
    least in part because she was too aggressive,
    cursed like a truck driver, and did not walk,
    talk, or dress in a feminine manner. In short,
    she was a woman who acted like a man, and for
    that, she was dealt a career-stunting blow.

61
  • Ruling on Hopkins's sex discrimination lawsuit,
    the Court held that Title VII forbids employers
    from discriminating against an employee for
    failing to live up to gender role expectations.
    You can't, in other words, punish a female
    employee for not being feminine enough. That sort
    of gender policing, the Court ruled, violates
    Title VII. In an oft-quoted line, the majority
    observed that "We are beyond the day when an
    employer could evaluate employees by assuming or
    insisting that they matched the stereotype
    associate with their group."

62
  • How far does this reasoning reach? Ideally, it
    would reach as far as necessary to serve one of
    the central aims of anti-discrimination law to
    promote equal employment opportunity through the
    eradication of sex-stereotyped decision-making.
    The reach of Price Waterhouse has been tested
    primarily in three types of cases (i) cases of
    gay men or lesbians challenging harassment or
    other discriminatory behavior (ii) cases of
    women challenging sex-differentiated dress or
    grooming codes and (iii) cases of transsexuals
    challenging all varieties of employment policies
    and decisions. Cases in each category, as well as
    cases that involve intersecting categories,
    reveal both the limits and the untested waters of
    the law's protection against sex stereotyping.

63
  • To begin, Title VII plainly prohibits employers
    from discriminating on the basis of sex. Other
    than for a very small subset of hiring decisions,
    the statute contains no defenses to a claim of
    facial discrimination -- that is, discrimination
    that is pursuant to a policy that expressly
    differentiates persons based on sex. And it
    contains no exception for dress codes.

64
  • Yet courts, in case after case, have upheld the
    right of employers to maintain sex-specific dress
    and grooming codes. Men must wear their hair
    short women can wear theirs long. Men must wear
    business suits women must wear dresses. Women
    can have piercings men cannot. Men cannot wear
    makeup women not only can, but in some cases are
    required to.

65
  • Perhaps the most objectionable case in this area
    is Jespersen v. Harrah's, a 2006 case in which an
    en banc panel of the Ninth Circuit upheld by a
    vote of 7-4 the casino's sex-differentiated
    grooming policy under Title VII. The policy was
    startling in the degree to which it required
    women to maintain a highly sexualized feminine
    appearance.

66
  • Employees at Harrah's were required to wear the
    same uniform, and all were required to be "well
    groomed, appealing to the eye, be firm and body
    toned, and be comfortable with maintaining this
    look while wearing the specified uniform." In
    addition, men and women had sex-specific grooming
    requirements.

67
  • Male employees had to wear their hair short, trim
    their fingernails and refrain from wearing makeup
    or nail polish. Female employees had to wear
    their hair "teased, curled, or styled," as well
    as wear stockings, colored nail polish, and
    specific types of facial makeup outlined by an
    "image consultant." Employees were made up by the
    image consultant, photographed, and held to the
    "personal best" image standard each day at work.

68
  • Darlene Jespersen, a longtime, well-regarded
    bartender at the casino, objected to the
    requirements for female employees. She was not in
    the habit of teasing her hair or wearing makeup
    and claimed that being forced to do so interfered
    with her chosen identity and constituted sex
    discrimination.

69
  • Jespersen's claim seemed promising, since the
    Ninth Circuit had applied Price Waterhouse
    broadly in two prior cases brought by gay men
    claiming they were harassed for being too
    effeminate. In those cases, which I have written
    about in a previous column, the court correctly
    treated gender policing punishing gay men for
    failing to act according to expectations of
    masculinity -- as a form of unlawful sex
    discrimination.

70
  • But Jespersen was foiled in her attempt to take a
    similar stand against forced femininity. The
    court sidestepped Price Waterhouse by simply
    noting that any stereotype being applied did not
    inhibit Jespersen's ability to do the job.

71
  • "The only evidence in the record to support the
    stereotyping claim is Jespersen's own subjective
    reaction to the makeup requirement," the court
    claimed. The court ruled, in effect, that
    sex-differentiated grooming and dress codes are
    permissible under Title VII as long as they do
    not impose unequal burdens on men and women.

72
  • But even under that standard, it seems puzzling
    why Jespersen did not prevail. It was obvious
    that women, even apart from any identity or
    stereotyping objection, bore more of a burden in
    complying with Harrah's "personal best" policy.
    It is neither expensive nor time-consuming for
    men to keep their hair and nails short and to not
    apply makeup or nail polish.

73
  • Women, on the other hand, were burdened with the
    expense and time involved with hair teasing, nail
    polishing and the application of heavy facial
    makeup every single day. The court refused to
    take judicial notice of this difference, however,
    and claimed, unpersuasively, that the record did
    not support a claim of unequal burden.

74
  • The court in Jespersen did a tremendous
    disservice to the cause of sex equality. Dress
    and grooming codes may seem insignificant, but
    they are not established in a vacuum. They
    reflect, instead, societal stereotypes and
    prejudices about what men and women should look
    like. These stereotypes punish both men and women
    who do not happen to fit traditional expectations
    of masculinity and femininity.

75
  • Meanwhile, dress and grooming codes also
    reinforce a gender hierarchy, in which a working
    woman is evaluated on both appearance and job
    performance. The requirement that women must wear
    leg-revealing business dresses or skirts, for
    instance, is not innocuous. (Nor is the burden of
    a working woman's need for a costly, varied
    wardrobe when a man can get away with a few
    nearly-identical business suits.).

76
  • Dress codes serve to emphasize gender
    differences, rather than to highlight
    similarities of skill, credentials, or effort.
    The refusal of courts to confront these cases
    head-on including the refusal to apply
    precedent that is obviously applicable has only
    served to perpetuate existing gender hierarchies

77
Language in our society
  • Mankind
  • The best man for the job
  • Manpower
  • Man the desk
  • Chairman
  • Headmaster
  • Policeman, Fireman

78
So
  • What does equal really mean to you?
  • What do you think about the stay-at-home mom
    versus working mom? What about the dad staying at
    home?
  • Women and education should they really have an
    advantage?

79
  • Equal professional opportunities?
  • Taking the mans name?
  • Having a female president? (not uncommon in many
    countries)

80
  • 70 percent of Americans believe that a woman
    should change her name when she marries,
  • 50 percent believe it should be required by law.
  • 5-10 percent of women keep their own names.

81
Politics
  • Rick Santorum- It Takes A Family
  • Accuses radical feminists of undermining
    families and trying to convince women that they
    could find fulfillment only in the workplace

82
  • He says his wife had written that section on his
    book-
  • He said when his wife quit her job to raise the
    couples children, she felt many people looked
    down their nose at that decision

83
  • Sadly the propaganda campaign launched in the
    1960s has taken root
  • The radical feminists succeeded in undermining
    the traditional family and convincing women that
    professional accomplishments are the key to
    happiness

84
  • Argues in the book that many of the problems
    facing the poor could be solved by building
    stronger families and communities, including by
    making divorce more difficult and providing
    fatherhood training programs

85
  • To put women in combat roles could be a very
    compromising situation, where people naturally
    may do things that may not be in the interest of
    the mission because of other types of emotions
    that are involved.

86
  • Men have emotions when you see a woman in harms
    way
  • It was a natural inclination to not focus on the
    mission but to try to be in a position where you
    might want to protect someone.

87
Trends and Statistics for Women in Business
  • Between 1997-2006 businesses fully women-owned,
    or majority owned by women, grew at nearly twice
    the rate of all U.S. firms

88
Happiest Wives in America
  • University of Virginias National Marriage
    Project When Baby Makes Three
  • Women who attend church at least weekly with
    their husband and have four or more children-
    happiest

89
  • Agreeing that raising children is one of lifes
    greatest joys doubles the likelihood that
    younger married women report being very happily
    married

90
  • Pronatalistic attitude is one of the top five
    predictors of marital happiness for both wives
    and husbands

91
  • Religious commitment also helps to build a happy
    marriage for women- one when husbands and wives
    attend church regularly are wives more likely to
    be happily married

92
  • 64 of wives report being happy when they and
    their husbands attend church (or religious
    service) regularly- compared to about 50 of
    wives in a marriage where only one spouse goes to
    church, or neither spouse attends

93
  • Wives in marriages where both spouses go to
    church regularly are also only about 1/3 as
    likely to report their marriage is at risk for
    divorce

94
  • 77 of wives in marriage where husband and wife
    believe God is at the center of my marriage
    report being happy
  • 1 of such wives report feeling marriages may end
    in divorce

95
  • Happiest marriages in the next generation down
    are those who have no children and those who have
    four or more children

96
  • Survey of Marital Generosity- religious husbands
    with four or more children are more likely to
    engage in regular acts of generositysuch as
    making coffee in the morning for their wives or
    frequently expressing affectionand to spend more
    quality time with their spouses compared to other
    husbands.

97
Are Wives Making More Than Their Husbands?
  • Liza Mundy
  • The Richer Sex How the New Majority of Female
    Breadwinners Is Transforming Sex, Love and Family

98
  • 2009 Bureau of Labor Statistics
  • almost 40 of U.S. working wives now out-earn
    their husbands

99
  • Female primary breadwinners- not just a product
    of our recession
  • Since 1987 the number of wives taking home more
    than their husbands has risen steadily- by a
    percentage point or so every year

100
  • More women than men are getting undergraduate and
    postgrad degrees- by 2050, there will be 140
    college educated women in the U.S. for every 100
    similar men

101
  • 2025- more than half of the earners in chief in
    American households will be women
  • 9/10 of the U.S. job categories to grow most will
    be nursing, accounting, postsecondary teaching-
    all female dominated

102
  • Women are increasingly preferring to remain
    unmarried rather than settle for men who arent
    their intellectual and professional equals

103
  • Women will have bargaining power they need to
    usher in a new age of fairness, complete the
    revolution, and push us past the unhappy days of
    the so-called second shift, when so many men and
    women were mired in arguments over equity that
    always seemed to boil down to laundry and dishes.

104
  • Men will be liberated as well- theyll craft a
    broader definition of masculinity, one that
    includes domestication but also more time spent
    on manly pursuits hunting, fishing, and extreme
    fitness.

105
  • Women will choose spouses who exhibit
    supportiveness (a glass of wine waiting at the
    end of the day, a chance to unburden), parenting
    skills, and domestic achievements.

106
  • Male college students- when asked what they look
    for in a partner- they say earning power much
    more than they did 50 years ago

107
  • 2008 Families and Work Institute- 40 said men
    should bring home the bacon and women to raise
    the kids, but in 1977 74 said men should do this

108
Surprising Statistics on Women in the Workplace
  • Women comprise 46 of the total U.S. labor force
    (in 1900 fewer than 20 of women participated in
    the labor market- today it is about 75)

109
  • Women make only 77.5 cents for every dollar that
    men earn (2003 census) most likely due to
    different personal choices men and women make
    about personal fulfillment, child rearing, hours
    at work

110
  • The more education a woman has, the greater the
    disparity in her wages- professional specialty
    occupations earned 72.7 of what men in the same
    position earned, and women in upper level
    executive, administrative, and managerial
    occupations earned less at 72.3

111
  • Women may work longer to receive the promotions
    that provide access to higher pay- women often
    have to work three years longer in a teaching
    position to be promoted to principal than their
    male counterparts

112
  • Women business owners employ 35 more people than
    all the Fortune 500 companies combined- 9.1
    million women owned businesses in the U.S.

113
  • Women account for 46 of the labor force, but 59
    of workers make less than 8 an hour- many women
    are taking on jobs that pay well under a living
    wage- 16 of U.S. households having women who are
    divorced, widowed, or never married and are sole
    providers

114
  • Many women are at a distinct disadvantage and
    struggling to make ends meet

115
  • Only 53 of employers provide at least some
    replacement pay during periods of maternity
    leave- many employers dont provide women with
    any benefits if they leave work temporarily to
    have a child

116
  • While there is no law requiring companies to
    offer paid maternity leave, considering it is an
    issue that primarily affects women, it is a blow
    to their income potential and ability to care for
    their families and themselves

117
  • 4/10 businesses worldwide have no women in senior
    management- studies show that women outnumber men
    in field like human resources, health
    administration, and education- but in other
    fields a glass ceiling still exists

118
  • Women earned less than men in 99 of all
    occupations. Women can expect to earn less over
    their lifetime than their male counterparts.
    Over 47 years of full-time work will result in
    700,000 lost wages for high school grads

119
  • Loss of 1.2 million for college grads, and 2
    million for professional school grads

120
  • Minority women fare the worst when it comes to
    equal pay- African American women earn 64 cents
    to every dollar white men make- Hispanic women
    just 52 cents per dollar

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