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The Status of Women: The View from Baltimore

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Title: The Status of Women: The View from Baltimore


1
The Status of Women The View from Baltimore
  • Amy Caiazza, Ph.D.
  • Institute for Womens Policy Research

2
The Status of Women in the States project
  • Provides citizens, policymakers, and other
    leaders with reliable data on the progress of
    women relative to women in other states, to men,
    and to the nation.
  • Creates tools and build capacity to address needs
    and disparities around the country and to make
    policy change

3
Project History
  • 51 state reports, 5 national reports, 1996-2005
  • Specialized, commissioned reports in Illinois,
    Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin
  • Topical reports on educational attainment,
    economic status, and preschool access
  • The Status of Women in Your County A Community
    Research Tool
  • Currently preparing strategic plan for next phase
    of research

4
Methods
  • Large national data sources with state by state
    data
  • Composite indices provide overall assessment of
    womens status in each topic area
  • Rank states from 1 to 51 (including DC)
  • Grade states from A to F
  • Participatory research model

5
Marylands Ranks and Grades, 2004
  • Rank Grade
  • Political Participation 11 C
  • Employment and Earnings 2 B
  • Social/Econ. Autonomy 1 B
  • Reproductive Rights 9 B
  • Health and Well-Being 31 C

6
Where have women in Maryland seen the most
progress?
7
Women in Maryland work in good jobs
  • 41 of women work in professional and managerial
    positions, compared with 33 nationally
  • Maryland ranks 2nd nationally

8
Women in Maryland have more wage equity
  • In 2003, women in Maryland earned 81 cents for
    every dollar men earned, for full-time, full-year
    work
  • Nationally, women earned 76 cents compared with
    men
  • Maryland ranks 3rd nationally

9
Women in Maryland are less likely to be poor
  • Less than 8 of women in Maryland were poor in
    2003, compared with 12 nationally
  • Maryland ranks 2nd nationally

10
Women in Maryland are highly educated
  • About 30 of women in Maryland have a college
    degree, compared with 22 nationally
  • Maryland ranks 4th nationally

11
Women have relatively good political
representation
  • Maryland ranks 12th for womens representation in
    elected office
  • More than a third (36) of the state legislature
    is women, the highest proportion in the country
  • Sen. Barbara Mikulski is one of only 14 women
    U.S. Senators

12
What are areas of persistent or growing concern
for women?
13
There are large disparities in wage equity in the
Baltimore region
  • County/City Wage Ratio
  • (1999)
  • Baltimore City 81
  • Baltimore County 71
  • Anne Arundel County 69
  • Howard County 64
  • Harford County 62
  • Carroll County 58

14
Poverty rates also vary widely
  • County/City Womens Poverty
  • (2000)
  • Carroll County 4
  • Howard County 4
  • Anne Arundel County 6
  • Harford County 6
  • Baltimore County 7
  • Baltimore City 24

15
And there are large differences in educational
attainment
  • County/City Women with College
  • Degrees (2000)
  • Howard County 56
  • Anne Arundel County 35
  • Baltimore County 35
  • Harford County 33
  • Carroll County 31
  • Baltimore City 23

16
Womens health remains a problem for Maryland
  • Maryland ranks 31st among the states for womens
    health
  • The state has the 3rd-highest incidence of
    HIV/AIDS
  • Maryland is also among the worst states for
    womens death rates by heart disease and breast
    cancer

17
Maryland still needs more women in elected office
  • Maryland has no women currently serving in the
    U.S. House of Representatives
  • There are no women in the states top elected
    executive positions
  • Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, former Lt. Governor,
    is the only women to have served in this type of
    office

18
Where are the opportunities for the most impact?
19
Confront challenges to awareness
  • Lack of good information and sustained, concerted
    ways to provide it on many aspects of womens
    status
  • General misunderstanding that women have achieved
    equity and continuing backlash against feminists
  • 100 years to gender equity in politics
  • 50 years to gender equity in pay

20
Work for more and better data
  • Produce ongoing reports on womens status
    regionally
  • Promote requirements that state agencies collect
    and analyze data by gender
  • Explore the causes and potential remedies for
    regional disparities
  • Promote efforts to produce data on unexplored
    areas of womens lives

21
Mens and Womens EarningsOver 15 Years
  • Women Men
  • 273,592 722,693
  • Source Still a Mans Labor Market The
    Long-Term Earnings Gap, Rose and Hartmann, 2004

22
Raise awareness through communications and
network building
  • Design and convene conferences, community forums,
    and town meetings
  • Work with community organizations active in
    economic development, education, and other issues
    to provide a womens lens

23
For more information
  • Amy Caiazza
  • caiazza_at_iwpr.org
  • 202/785-5100
  • www.iwpr.org/states
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