Inclusion

Canadian Board Diversity Council's Annual Report Card 2011

Some disconcerting findings on the lack of diversity in the boardrooms of Canada's largest corporations were released today in the Canadian Board Diversity Council's Second Annual Report Card.
 
While 73 per cent of corporate board members feel their boards are diverse, the reality is that women are significantly less likely than men to serve on corporate boards. In fact, most board members oppose the development and adoption of a formal diversity policy.
 
Pamela Jeffery, Founder of the Canadian Board Diversity Council (CBDC), says it is time for Canada's board directors to speed up the pace of change. "Directors whose boards have re-defined diversity believe they make better board decisions as a result of this diversity," Jeffery explains. "That's because important, diverse perspectives on customers, international markets and stakeholders that were once missing are now being represented.
URL: 
http://www.wxnetwork.com/content/files/final-cbdc_report2011_eng_14-2.pdf

Maternity Leave and Employment Patterns of First-Time Mothers: 1961-2008

Half of First-Time Mothers Receive Paid Leave, Census Bureau Reports
 
Fifty-one percent of working women who had their first birth between 2006 and 2008 received paid leave (i.e. maternity leave, sick leave, vacation) compared with 42 percent between 1996 and 2000, according to a report released today by the U.S. Census Bureau.
 
This finding comes from Maternity Leave and Employment Patterns of First-Time Mothers: 1961-2008, a report that analyzes trends in women's work experience before their first child, identifies their maternity leave arrangements before and after the birth and examines how rapidly they returned to work.
 
"The last three decades have seen major changes in the work patterns of expectant mothers," said Lynda Laughlin, a family demographer at the Census Bureau.
URL: 
http://www.census.gov/prod/2011pubs/p70-128.pdf

Report of the Sixth Annual National Survey on Retention and Promotion of Women in Law Firms

The National Association of Women Lawyers (NAWL(R)) and The NAWL Foundation(R) released the results of their sixth annual Survey on Retention and Promotion of Women in Law Firms. The Survey is the only national study of the nation's 200 largest law firms which annually tracks the progress of women lawyers at all levels of private practice, including the most senior positions, and collects data on firms as a whole rather than from a subset of individual lawyers.
 
For the first time since the Survey began in 2006, there was a noted decline in the number of women entering big-firm practice.
 
"Women lawyers already leave big-firm practice at a greater pace than their male counterparts, and this narrowing of the pipeline at the entry level, however slight, only further decreases the pool of women available for promotion," said NAWL President Heather Giordanella, Counsel at Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP.
URL: 
http://nawl.timberlakepublishing.com/files/NAWL%202011%20Annual%20Survey%20Report%20FINAL%20Publication-ready%2011-9-11(2).pdf
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