我想看一级黄色片_欧美性爱无遮挡电影_色丁香视频网站中文字幕_视频一区 视频二区 国产,日本三级理论日本电影,午夜不卡免费大片,国产午夜视频在线观看,18禁无遮拦无码国产在线播放,在线视频不卡国产在线视频不卡 ,,欧美一及黄片,日韩国产另类

立即打開(kāi)
最具影響力商界女性的前世今生

最具影響力商界女性的前世今生

Laura Vanderkam 2013年05月30日
1973年,《財(cái)富》盤(pán)點(diǎn)收入在3萬(wàn)美元以上的商界女性,編撰“最具影響力商界女性”,,結(jié)果發(fā)現(xiàn),,符合條件的女性剛剛只能湊足10個(gè)。如今,,受名額限制,,財(cái)富“最具影響力的商界女性”排行榜常常需要忍痛割?lèi)?ài)。盡管如此,,女性的職場(chǎng)環(huán)境仍然有很多地方至今沒(méi)有改變,。

????1973年,貝蒂?弗里丹的《女性的奧秘》(The Feminine Mystique)一書(shū)已經(jīng)問(wèn)世10年,,《Ms.》雜志發(fā)行了第一期刊物,。美國(guó)勞工統(tǒng)計(jì)局(Bureau of Labor Statistics)的資料顯示,那年女性涌入職場(chǎng),,占到勞動(dòng)人口的40%,。擁有學(xué)齡子女的已婚女性多半從事著付薪工作。然而,,《財(cái)富》(Fortune)雜志的溫德姆?羅伯遜在1973年4月的一篇文章中調(diào)查了大公司的用人情況,,他對(duì)這種所謂的女性職場(chǎng)崛起產(chǎn)生了疑問(wèn):“她們究竟在哪里?”

????美國(guó)勞工統(tǒng)計(jì)局的資料顯示,,只有3%的職場(chǎng)女性是“管理人員”,。羅伯遜寫(xiě)道:“在最為顯要的職位(也就是公司管理層)上很少看到女性的身影?!?/p>

????她們到底有多么罕見(jiàn),?《財(cái)富》將目光對(duì)準(zhǔn)了工業(yè)企業(yè)1,000強(qiáng)和非工業(yè)企業(yè)50強(qiáng)榜單。在這1,300家公司中,,有1,220家必須向美國(guó)證券交易委員會(huì)(SEC)提交報(bào)告,,披露有關(guān)薪酬最高的三位高管和收入超過(guò)3萬(wàn)美元(相當(dāng)于如今的16萬(wàn)美元左右)的所有主管的信息。在由此產(chǎn)生的6,500人中,只有11人是女性,。在減去一位似乎并未過(guò)多參與公司管理的女性后,,羅伯遜在一篇名為《大公司里職位最高的10名女性》(The Ten Highest-Ranking Women in Big Business)的文章中簡(jiǎn)要介紹了剩余的10位女性。這篇文章顯示了40年來(lái)哪些已經(jīng)改變,,更為重要的是,,哪些未曾改變。

????1973年,,女性幾乎不可能晉升到領(lǐng)導(dǎo)職位,。羅伯遜寫(xiě)到,雖然這份榜單上的女性,,包括《華盛頓郵報(bào)》(Washington Post)的凱瑟琳?格拉漢姆和芭比娃娃(Barbie)的創(chuàng)造者露絲?漢德勒,,都是“很有才華、勤奮工作的高管”,,但她們也都“受益于家庭關(guān)系,、婚姻或者她們協(xié)助締造了她們現(xiàn)在管理的那家公司,只有兩人是例外,??偠灾齻冎械拇蠖鄶?shù)人不必處理至少兩個(gè)問(wèn)題,,而這兩個(gè)問(wèn)題多年來(lái)已經(jīng)阻礙了最有才干,、最符合要求的女性。她們不是從公司里前途有限的職位干起,,她們也不必面對(duì)歧視女性的公司等級(jí)制度,。”

????諷刺的是,,“這些女性顯然都不必工作,,實(shí)際上,要是沒(méi)有家庭關(guān)系,,她們中有些人根本不會(huì)去工作,,或者不會(huì)擁有輝煌的事業(yè)”。時(shí)代明鏡公司(Times Mirror Co.)的多蘿西?錢(qián)德勒在她的個(gè)人簡(jiǎn)介中寫(xiě)道:“如果我不是諾曼?錢(qián)德勒太太,,我就不會(huì)擁有我曾得到的那些機(jī)會(huì),。”

????但羅伯遜寫(xiě)道:“她們每個(gè)人都在各自的公司里發(fā)揮了積極和重要的作用,。這是個(gè)引人矚目的證據(jù),,證明其他的女性管理人才都被浪費(fèi)掉了?!?/p>

????The year was 1973. Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique had been out for a decade; Ms.magazine had published its first issue. Women were pouring into the workforce, hitting 40% of the total working population that year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Over half of married women with school-age kids held a paying job. And yet, as Fortune'sWyndham Robertson surveyed the world of big business in an April 1973 story, he had a question about this supposed female surge: "Where in blazes are they?"

????A mere 3% of women in the workforce were "managers and administrators," according to the BLS, and, as Robertson wrote, "in jobs where visibility is greatest -- i.e. in corporate management -- women are seldom seen."

????How seldom seen? Fortune looked at its list of the 1,000 largest industrial companies, plus the 50 largest companies in six non-industrial businesses. From this list of 1,300 firms, 1,220 had to file proxies with the SEC that provided information on the top three paid officers, and any director earning over $30,000 (equivalent to just shy of $160,000 today). Of the 6,500 names generated that way, a mere 11 turned out to be women. After subtracting a woman who appeared not to be closely involved in running her company, Robertson profiled the others in a piece called "The Ten Highest-Ranking Women in Big Business" that is notable both for showing what has changed in 40 years and, as importantly, what has not.

????In 1973, it was almost impossible for a woman to work her way up the ranks to a leadership role. Robertson wrote that while the women on the list -- which included names such as the Washington Post's (WPO) Katharine Graham and Barbie creator Ruth Handler -- were "highly capable and hard-working executives," they also, with only two exceptions, "were helped along by a family connection, by marriage, or by the fact that they helped to create the organizations they now preside over. In short, most of them did not have to deal with at least two problems that have over the years held back even the most able and qualified women: They did not start out in their companies in jobs with limited futures, and they did not have to work their way through a corporate hierarchy that discriminated against them."

????The irony of this was that "none of these women, obviously, has to work, and in fact some of them wouldn't have -- or wouldn't have had careers -- without the family tie-in." Dorothy Chandler of the Times Mirror Co., reported in her profile that, "If I had not been Mrs. Norman Chandler, I would not have had the opportunities I've had."

????But, as Robinson wrote, "Each of them plays an effective and important role within her corporation -- an impressive bit of evidence that other female executive talent is going to waste."

掃碼打開(kāi)財(cái)富Plus App