Diversity & Inclusion

DIVERSIFYING THE LEADERSHIP PROJECT

Women’s research, policy and advocacy centers have long been a driving force in efforts to create more diverse institutions, especially in higher education.  Yet the fields of women’s research and women’s studies have themselves not been diverse, and too often their leadership has not reflected the vision, energies, perspectives, and concerns of women of color.



"With this project, the Council proposed to address the historical under-representation of women of color within the fields of women’s studies and research, and … to foster the development of a new generation of leaders and experts that bring a diversity of experiences and perspectives to address issues of social justice, inclusion, and equity."

-- The National Council for Research on Women, Report to the Ford Foundation, June 2009

To help address this challenge, the Council launched a two-year project (2008-2009): Diversifying the Leadership of Women’s Research, Policy, and Advocacy Centers. The project was designed to increase the number of women of color at all professional levels at select policymaking, advocacy, and research centers, and to identify best practices for promoting their leadership within their institutions and in the field more generally.



Download full analysis of the project's Strategies, Outcomes and Lessons Learned as a pdf.

More information is available in our project-related reports and programs, and in the project meeting summaries from our Annual Conference Reports for 2008 and 2009.

The six centers chosen for implementing projects:

The National Council for Research on Women gratefully acknowledges the support of the Ford Foundation for this
project. Additional support was provided by the home institutions of five of the project participants: Miami University
of Ohio; Simmons School of Management; the University of Massachusetts, Boston; the University of Oregon; and
San Francisco State University.

"The changes brought by these initiatives will affect the way knowledge is conceptualized and disseminated by, for and about underrepresented women of color."

--The Women’s Studies Program, Miami University of Ohio

 

NCRW Resources

Member Centers

News

  • May 30, 2012

    The OpEd Project conducts an annual Byline Survey to get a sense of who is getting heard in public discourse.


  • May 17, 2012

    The Washington Post reports that Army leaders have begun to study the prospect of sending female soldiers to the service’s prestigious Ranger school — another step in the effort to broaden opportunities for women in the military.

    ...

  • April 23, 2012

    Two female lawmakers,  Representative Carolyn B. Maloney, Democrat of New York, and Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, said Sunday that the dearth of women Secret Service agents might have contributed to the scandal linking agency...


  • April 18, 2012

     Goldman Sachs and MetLife have announced that they will release gender and racial demographic data on their workforce. John Liu, New York City’s Comptroller who also serves as an advisor and trustee for the city's pension funds, has...


  • April 16, 2012

    Jenna Talackova, who was was born a man but began the process of becoming a woman at age 14 with hormone treatments and then had surgery at the age of 19, want to be Miss Universe.


Blog Posts

July 24, 2009 posted by Amy Sueyoshi*This Sunday (July 26) while others will be celebrating National Parent’s Day, I will be honoring my ancestors at the San Francisco Buddhist Temple Obon...
Tuesday, July 6, 2010 - 1:13pm
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 July 25, 2009 postedy by Amanda Harris*The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) families movement is a growing movement within the broader LGBTQ rights movement that focuses...
Tuesday, July 6, 2010 - 1:12pm
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July 26, 2009 posted by Rebekah Spicuglia*National Parents Day, unlike the heavily promoted and merchandised Mother’s and Father’s Days that by their very nature tend to reflect gendered...
Tuesday, July 6, 2010 - 1:09pm
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July 27, 2009 posted by Kyla Bender-BairdAs I began collecting background research for National Parent’s Day and the vast diversity of families in the United States, I kept running across...
Tuesday, July 6, 2010 - 1:08pm
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 July 27, 2009 posted by Deborah Siegel*Last weekend, my partner Marco and I took a childbirth class at the Manhattan hospital where I’ll be giving birth this fall.  I found it very...
Tuesday, July 6, 2010 - 1:08pm
0 comments

Program Events

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Sponsors

The National Council for Research on Women gratefully acknowledges the support of the Ford Foundation for this project. Additional support was provided by the home institutions of five of the project participants: Miami University of Ohio; Simmons School of Management; the University of Massachusetts, Boston; the University of Oregon; and San Francisco State University.

 

Advisory Committee for Diversifying the Leadership

  • Beverly Guy-Sheftall (Chair), Director, Women's Research & Resource Center, Spelman College 
  • Ruth Zambrana, Professor and Graduate Director, Women’s Studies Department; Director of Consortium on Race, Gender & Ethnicity, University of Maryland, College Park
  • Angela Ginorio, Director of Women Studies, University of Washington, Seattle
  • Yolanda Broyles-Gonzalez, Professor, Mexican American Studies & Research Center, University of Arizona
  • Carol Hollenshead, University of Michigan, Director, Center for the Education of Women
  • Sandra Morgen, Professor of Women’s Studies, Penn State, and formerly the head of Center for the Study of Women in Society, University of Oregon
  • Damary Bonilla, Latina Initiative Project Manager, Girls Incorporated
  • Inés Hernández Ávila, Director, Chicana/ Latina Research Center, University of California, Davis