I’ve received a lot of questions lately during seminars and from women emailing me to ask if I think there is a glass ceiling or an invisible barrier beneath the top of the corporate ladder that ...
The glass ceiling, that invisible barrier to advancement that women face at the top levels of the workplace, remains as intractable as ever and is a drag on the economy. New research from the ...
Marilyn Loden, an advocate for workplace equality who coined the phrase “glass ceiling,” has died at the age 76, leaving behind a feminist legacy that inspired generations of women. Loden first said ...
Over its decade of tracking women’s progress in the workforce, the Economist’s Glass Ceiling Index has registered very little improvement, as gendered structural barriers endure. Protesters march to ...
In part one of this two-part column, CRN columnist Cass Cooper explores the cultural contextual changes for gender inclusion. How has the glass ceiling impacted women at work? Are women less ...
Hillary Clinton cracked another glass ceiling last week, reaching the number of delegates needed in the Democratic primary race to become the first female presumptive presidential nominee of a major ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results