Joan C. Williams

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Joan C. Williams is a prominent feminist legal scholar whose work focuses on issues faced by women in the workplace. She currently serves as the Founding Director at the Center for Work Life Law. Williams is also a Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of California, Hastings School of Law.[1] Williams also contributes to the Harvard Business Review blog, the Huffington Post, and the Psychology Today blog.

Education

Williams received her B.A. in history from Yale and, later, her master's degree in City Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and her JD from Harvard Law School.[2]

Women in the workplace

The primary focus of Williams's work has been gender inequality in the workplace and the lack of women in leadership positions. She attempts to look at how gender roles and expectations influence career success of both women and men. Her main arguments focus on the need for both men and women's roles to be redefined in order to allow for greater gender quality in the workforce.

Her 2000 book Unbending Gender: Why Family and Work Conflict and What To Do About It,[3] winner of the 2000 Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award, which argues that, in order for there to be equal opportunity for men and women in the workplace, the role of men also needs to be redefined. While women are looked upon traditionally as being responsible for child-rearing, housekeeping, and other such jobs, men are also stereotyped as being breadwinners who work long hours in high-paying leadership roles within organizations. She posits that, not only does the definition of what it means to be a woman need to change, but that men also need to be freed from the burden of traditional masculinity.[4]

In her latest book What Works for Women at Work: Four Patterns Working Women Need to Know,[5] co-authored with her daughter Rachel Dempsey, she identifies four particular obstacles that women face:[6]

  1. The pressure for women to constantly prove their competence at work.
  2. The need for women to find the right balance between masculinity and femininity in the workplace.
  3. The long-discussed issue of mothers balancing responsibilities at home and work.
  4. The idea that women's strategies for solving these issues vary and they often feel compelled to argue for their way and against the ways of other women.

Center for Work Life Law

The Center for Work Life Law was founded by Williams with the goal of creating new initiatives that would help women to succeed in the workplace, which she identified as having stalled, as women's involvement in the workplace hit a plateau in the 1990s. The Center aims to create concrete and permanent solutions to many of the problems faced by women.

Much of the work done attempts to marry research with policy in order to change attitudes towards working women, creating new methods for women to become leaders, and also integrates and acknowledges that gender attitudes need to change for men, as well. To date, Williams and her colleagues have succeeded in formulating new best practices, legal theories, policies, and even a framework for performance evaluations that integrates research on gender issues in the workplace.[7]

The Center for Work Life Law also has a series of initiatives and workshops aimed at providing women with skills and support in order to become leaders in their workplaces and also provides companies and organizations with information and training on how to create an environment that allows for women to advance. Additionally, their Gender Bias Learning Project works with universities to retain women in STEM programs.[8]

See also

References

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External links