Awareness & Education

Expert Profile

Location: 
United States
33° 44' 56.382" N, 84° 23' 16.7352" W
Member Organizations: 

Beverly Guy Sheftall, Ph.D., is the founding director of the Women's Research and Resource Center and the Anna Julia Cooper Professor of Women's Studies at Spelman College.  She is also adjunct professor at Emory University's Institute for Women's Studies where she teaches graduate courses. At the age of sixteen, she entered Spelman College where she majored in English and minored in secondary education.  After graduation with honors, she attended Wellesley College for a fifth year of study in English.  In 1968, she entered Atlanta to pursue a master's degree in English; her thesis was entitled, "Faulkner's Treatment of Women in His Major Novels."  A year later she began her first teaching job in the Department of English at Alabama State University in Montgomery, Alabama.

Location

Atlanta, GA
United States
33° 44' 56.382" N, 84° 23' 16.7352" W

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WOMEN’S EQUALITY FORUM: Daddy, can a man be Prime Minister?

By Gwendolyn Beetham*

When I was in graduate school in London, one of my professors told a cute story about his daughter, born during the Thatcher era, who as a small child had asked him whether a man could be Prime Minister. The point that my professor was trying to make was that having more women in positions of power does make a difference in how women’s roles are perceived by society at large.


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WOMEN’S EQUALITY FORUM: Steps to Political Equality from Gloria Thomas

By Gloria Thomas*

Women will not have achieved political equality until critical societal changes have taken place. First, women’s successes in being elected and appointed to political positions, corporate and non-profit executive leadership roles, as well as significant public and private boards must no longer be an anomaly to demonstrate equality has been accomplished. When we reach this point, there will no longer be a need for organizations like The White House Project to inspire women to run for public office. Nor will there be a need for other leadership programs designed to provide women with the skills and networks necessary to pursue various executive level positions and to provide the staying power to succeed once they are in these roles.


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Center for Research on Women

Contact


Memphis, TN 38152-3530
Ph. (901) 678-2770
Fx. (901) 678-3652
http://www.memphis.edu/crow/
crow@memphis.edu
lynda.sagrestano@memphis.edu

The Center for Research on Women (CROW) at the University of Memphis conducts, promotes and disseminates scholarship on women and social inequality. CROW's approach to research, theory and programming emphasizes the structural relationships among race, class, gender and sexuality, particularly in the U.S. South and among women of color.

Recently Posted

Employment Opportunities

Principal Staff

Lynda M. Sagrestano, Ph.D., Director
Ph. (901) 678-2780
E-mail: lsagrstn@memphis.edu

Lornette Stokes, B.S., Administrative Secretary
Ph. (901) 678-2770
E-mail: lwstokes@memphis.edu

Teresa A. Diener, M.A., Project Coordinator, Community Voice Evaluation
Ph. (901) 678-2293
E-mail: tdiener@memphis.edu

Naketa M. Edney, M.A., Research Associate, Community Voice Evaluation
Ph. (901) 678-2153
E-mail: nedney@memphis.edu

Jennifer Gooch, M.A., Research Associate, Women's Economic Security: Campaign
Ph. (901) 678-2642
E-mail: jgooch@memphis.edu

Areas of Expertise:

Affirmative Action, Awareness & Education, Higher Education, Women in STEM, Women's, Gender & Feminist Studies, Education & Education Reform, Equality, Diversity & Inclusion

Member Experts:


Projects & Campaigns

CROW's brand of action-oriented, community-based research strengthens the public's understanding of women's experiences in Memphis and contributes to local, regional and national policy discussions.

Women's Academic Network
The Women's Academic Network provides women on our campus with an informal opportunity to meet new colleagues, socialize, and discuss topics of interest and relevance to women in academia.  

Women's Research Forum
The Center invites women scholars to present their work on campus in a public forum.  

Memphis Safe Campus Initiative
CROW is conducting research on campus safety, as well as working to prevent and reduce violence against women on the University of Memphis campus.

In addition to ongoing research, the Center:

* is heading a collaborative of over 50 Memphis organizations dedicated to reducing the numbers of teen pregnancy in our community.

* is working with other University of Memphis faculty, staff and students to create a Safe Zone for GLBTQ students on our campus.

Current Research Agenda for Spring 2010:

 

 

 

 

  • Families First and Tennessee's Single Female-Headed Households
    Research to assess Tennessee's TANF program, Families First, and its effectiveness in serving the state's single female-headed households. Sponsored by the Women's Foundation of Greater Memphis.
     
  • Sexual Harassment of Teens in Memphis Middle and High Schools
    An investigation of the frequency, types, and long-term impact of sexual harassment experienced by teenagers in Memphis middle and high schools.  Supported in part by The Urban Child Institute and the University of Memphis Faculty Research Grant Program.
     
  • Infant Mortality in Memphis
    Evaluation of Community Voice, a new intervention to reduce infant mortality.   Supported in part by the Tennessee Governor’s Office of Children’s Care Coordination.
     
  • Campus Safety for Women
    Project to assess, reduce and prevent violence against women on University of Memphis campuses.
     
  • Preconception Health
    Project in development that would address pregnancy planning, timing, and preparation for healthy pregnancy among urban adolescent girls, with goals to prevent unintended pregnancy and adverse birth outcomes.
     
  • Supporting Women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics
    Project in development to systematically increase the recruitment, retention, and advancement of women faculty in the STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) disciplines at the University of Memphis.

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Reports & Resources

    Extensive back list of working papers and bibliographies on Southern women and women of color. Contact CROW for list and order information.

    Examples of recent publications include:

    * Sagrestano, Lynda. 2009. Nowhere to hide: A Look At the Pervasive  Atmosphere of Sexual Harassment in Memphis Area Middle & High Schools.  

    * CROW. 2008. Center for Research on Women: 2007-2008 Annual Report.

    * Across Races & Nations: Building New Communities in the U.S. South, Published September 2006 by The Center for Research on Women, University of Memphis (TN); the Highlander Research and Education Center (TN); and the Southern Regional Council (GA). This 370-page report published in English and Spanish provides information to activists, philanthropists and others who seek to address immigration and the needs of immigrants as part of larger social justice agendas in the South. Includes project and participant overviews, case studies, glossaries of U.S. immigration terms and policies, economic fact sheets, maps, "Know Your Rights" workshop guides for immigrants, and other materials for popular education.

    * What Is a Living Wage in Memphis?, David H. Ciscel, working paper (2002).

    * Advocates for Girls: Promoting Success in Early Adolescence, Barbara Ellen Smith and Claire Porter (1998).

    * Profiles: A Report on the Women and Girls of Greater Memphis, Martha Schmidt (1997).

     

     

    Center News

    Opportunities, Grants & Fellowships

    Opportunities:

     

     

     

     

     

  • Research Fellowships
  • Support for Visiting Scholars
  • Research experience and mentoring for graduate students in Women's Studies and other disciplines

     

     

     

     

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    Consortium on Race, Gender, and Ethnicity

    Contact

    1208 Cole Field House
    College Park, MD 20742
    Ph. (301) 405-2931
    Fx. (301) 405-2868
    http://www.crge.umd.edu
    btdill@umd.edu
    rzambran@umd.edu

    The Consortium on Race, Gender and Ethnicity (CRGE) is a university-wide initiative promoting research, scholarship and faculty and graduate student development. CRGE's work explores the intersections of race, gender, ethnicity and other dimensions of inequality as they shape the construction and representation of identities, behavior and complex social relations.

    CRGE has three major areas of work:

    • research at the intersections of race, gender and ethnicity;
    • rigorous mentorship and training programs and activities for developing scholars; and
    • collaboration aimed at creating a campus climate conducive to excellent intersectional scholarship.

    Over the past ten years, we have created a dynamic center that has achieved significant milestones in each of these areas.

    Recently Posted

    Employment Opportunities

    Principal Staff

    Ruth E. Zambrana, Ph.D., Director
    E-mail: rzambran@umd.edu

    Laura A. Logie, Ph.D., Assistant Director
    E-mail: lauraalogie@hotmail.com

    Bonnie Thornton Dill, Ph.D., Founding Director, CRGE
    E-mail: btdill@umd.edu

    Wendy Hall, Program Management Specialist
    E-mail: hallw@umd.edu

    Beth Douthirt-Cohen, Communications Coordinator
    E-mail: bdc1@umd.edu

    Areas of Expertise:

    Awareness & Education, Culture & Identity, Diversity & Inclusion, Women's, Gender & Feminist Studies, Equality, Diversity & Inclusion

    Member Experts:


    Projects & Campaigns

    Current Research

     

    Developing Research Studies include:
     

     

    Past Research Program Areas:

     

    Intersections, Identities, and Inequalities (Dr. Bonnie Thornton Dill, director)

    This program area focuses on the development of theoretical, methodological and pedagogical approaches to the study of intersections of race, gender, class, ethnicity and other dimensions of inequality. It is an interdisciplinary research program area that seeks to elaborate how dimensions of inequality intersect, creating new and distinct social formations. This includes promoting research that contextualizes the lives and experiences of individuals and groups, as well as develops applications of knowledge to human problems. This scholarship embraces a wide range of approaches that permit complex and nuanced explorations. Intersectional analysis is also an effort to move beyond binary or oppositional analyses and toward an understanding of the ways the ideological, political, and economic systems of power construct and reconstruct one another. An intersectional approach, grounded in lived experience, provides the intellectual foundation for the pursuit of social justice.

     

    Health and Social Well Being of Low Income Women, Children, and Families (Dr. Ruth E. Zambrana, director)

    This program area seeks to build a more comprehensive and ethnic-specific scientific knowledge base on the effects of the intersection of poverty, institutional barriers, and other non-medical factors that contribute to adverse health status. This approach takes into account the influence of race, gender, and ethnicity to promote responsiveness in the development of future health interventions.

     

    Material Culture/Visual Culture (Drs. Mary Corbin Sies and Angel David Nieves, co-directors)

    The Material Culture/Visual Culture (MC/VC) program area is engaged in research on African American material and visual culture, and more generally on the material and visual culture of marginalized subgroups of North America. The group seeks to publicize the value of material and visual evidence for understanding the cultures of everyday life of American subcultures and to foster an environment in which scholars from different backgrounds can explore and refine research and theories for working with material and visual culture.

     

    Schooling, Ethnic Communities and International Perspectives. (Dr. Lory J. Dance, director).

    This Research Program Area is in the early stages of development. Led by sociologist Dr. Lory J. Dance, this area focuses on the uses of qualitative methodologies in the study of education in ethnic communities in the United States and internationally. The group also houses the Qualitative Research Interest Group (QRIG; co-directed by Drs. Lory J. Dance and Annette Lareau), which sponsored a colloquium series in fall 2005 on funding qualitative research projects.

     

    Other Activities:

    Intersectional Research Database. CRGE is home to the world's first online database devoted exclusively to intersectional research. The Intersectional Research Database (IRD), which was launched in summer 2005, currently features over 100 annotations of articles and books on intersectional issues. The IRD is updated weekly and will soon include audio, visual images, video and sound.

    CRGE Graduate Colloquium. CRGE holds a monthly colloquium for graduate students that focuses on various topics related to intersectionality and social justice. Graduate students from across the disciplines participate through attendance and by sharing their own work at the end of each semester. Recent colloquium topics have dealt with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina; interdisciplinary job talks; intersections and sexualities; and the commodification of Black youth, which was led by Dr. Patricia Hill Collins.

    Research Interest Groups (RIGS). RIGS are smaller research groups, each sponsored by a Research Program Area. RIGS are collaborative, interdisciplinary groups that conduct intersectional research. The RIGS aim to create groups that can assist their members in preparing and submitting proposals for federal, state, and private sector research grants in CRGE Research Program Areas.

    Visit: www.crge.umd.edu/qrig.html

     

     

    Reports & Resources

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    Center News

    Opportunities, Grants & Fellowships

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    Video

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    Clayman Institute for Gender Research

    Contact

    589 Capistrano Way
    Stanford, CA 94305-8640
    Ph. (650) 723-1994
    Fx. (650) 725-0374
    http://gender.stanford.edu/
    gender-email@stanford.edu


    The Michelle R. Clayman Institute for Gender Research at Stanford University was founded in 1974. It supports interdisciplinary research on women's changing economic and social roles, and wider issues of gender. The Institute sponsors annual lectures and seminars. In 2000, the Institute embarked on a new academic initiative entitled, "The Difficult Dialogues Program," which brings together distinguished Stanford faculty, eminent visiting scholars, and policy makers to consider critical social issues facing our nation that influence and are influenced by issues of gender and ethnicity. The findings of the first Dialogue, "Aging in the 21st century," were summarized in a white paper in 2002. The second Dialogue, "The Changing Structure of the Modern American Family" ran from 2002 to 2004, and its findings will be published shortly. The Institute has recently embarked on its third Dialogue, on the "Dual Career Couples in the Academy".

    Recently Posted

    Employment Opportunities

    Principal Staff

    Shelley J. Correll, Director
    Ph. (650) 723-1994
    E-mail: scorrell@stanford.edu

    Lori Nishiura Mackenzie, Associate Director
    E-mail: Lorim@stanford.edu

    Jane Gruba-Chevalier, Program Manager
    E-mail: jmgruba@stanford.edu

    Ann Enthoven, Events Manager
    E-mail: ann.enthoven@stanford.edu

    Cindi Trost, Director of Development
    E-mail: cjtrost@stanford.edu

    Areas of Expertise:

    Awareness & Education, Barriers & Opportunities, Disparities, Higher Education, Women in STEM, Title IX, Women's, Gender & Feminist Studies, Education & Education Reform, Equality, Diversity & Inclusion, Science, Technology, Engineering & Math (STEM)

    Member Experts:


    Projects & Campaigns

    "The Changing Structure of the Modern American Family". The focus of this forum was to consider myths surrounding the modern family, to consider the different structures which modern families take and the pressures under which they exist, and to provide practical suggestions to policy makers on ways to support the family, in all its diverse forms. Conclusions will be published in 2006.

    "Dual Career Couples in the Academy". The focus of this research, which began in fall 2005, is to tease out the problems facing dual career couples, and to offer practical suggestions to universities which face difficulties in recruiting and retaining high quality faculty. The study is planned to continue till 2008.

    Science, math, engineering and technology

    Technical Women in Silicon Valley. This study aims to discover why relatively few technical women make it to the highest ranks of Silicon Valley's technology industries. The object is to develop proposals for the industry as a whole to help recruit and retain women in technical roles. This research began in fall 2005, and is planned to continue till 2008.

    Science and Engineering Graduate Women's Association. The Institute sponsors this umbrella group which provides social and profession support to female graduate students in science and engineering disciplines at Stanford University.

    Gendered Innovations in Science and Engineering. In April 2005, the Institute hosted an international conference on how the tools of gender analysis, when turned to science, medicine, and engineering, can profoundly alter human knowledge. This two-day conference focused on specific ways in which gender analysis has brought spark and creativity to particular fields of science. Examples of the success of gender analysis come from fields such as medicine, biology, and archaeology. It was the goal of this conference to highlight and analyze these successes. Questions remain concerning whether gender analysis has anything to offer physics, mathematics, computer science, or chemistry - issues we also addressed. The question is how can an understanding of how gender operates in science and engineering open new vistas for future research. Co-sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Provost Office Gabilan Fund . Video: The DVDs of conference sessions are available through Stanford's libraries for educational use. They are also available through Interlibrary Loan. The call numbers are: ZDVD 10246 c.1, 2: Gendered innovations in science & engineering [7 discs set]: April 15-16, 2005 / Institute for Research on Women & Gender.

     

     

    Wed 3/17/2010 9:00 AM ~ Thu 3/18/2010 1:00 PM

    Serra House Conference Room

    589 Capistrano Way

    Stanford, CA

    Projects:  

    Difficult Dialogues "Aging in the 21 st Century".. The focus of this forum concerned cultural and social policy changes that would enable older adults to maximize their contributions to society. The consensus report was published in 2002: copies are available from the Institute.

     

    Reports & Resources

    Forthcoming Publication:

    Henderson, Andrea,  Justine Tinkler, Manwai Ku, and Londa Schiebinger, "Venture Capitalist Decision-Making: Gendered Assumptions about Technical Knowledge and Social Networks." (forthcoming)

     

    Aging

    Yalom, Marilyn & Carstensen, Laura (eds). Inside the American Couple. ( Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2002>

    Difficult Dialogues Program - Institute for Research on Women and Gender. Aging in the 21st Century consensus report. ( Stanford, CA: Stanford University, 2002)

     

    Economic and social status of women

    Clayman Institute. 2008. Climbing The Tech Ladder; Obstacles and Solutions for Mid-Level Women in Information Technology. Written by A. Henderson, C. Simard, S. Gilmartin, L. Schiebinger, and T. Whitney.

    Strober, Myra and Agnes Miling Keneko Chan. The Road Winds Uphill All the Way: Gender, Work, and Family in the United States and Japan. (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1999)


    Family

    Clayman Institute. 2008. Dual-Career Academic Couples: What Universities Need To Know. Written by L. Schiebinger, A. Henderson, and S. Gilmartin.

    Yalom, Marilyn. A History of the Wife. ( New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers Inc., 2001)

    Yalom, Marilyn and Thorne, Barrie (eds). Rethinking the Family. (Albany, NY: State University New York Press, 1990)

     

    Feminist Thought and Scholarship

    Rhode, Deborah L. Speaking of Sex: The Denial of Gender Inequality. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997)

    Rhode, Deborah L. Theoretical Perspectives on Sexual Difference. (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1990)

    Boxer, Marilyn Jacoby. When Women Ask the Questions: Creating Women's Studies in America. (Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998)

    Freedman, Estelle. No Turning Back. ( Westminster, MD: Ballantine Books, 2002)

     

    Global Issues

    Walker-Moffat, Wendy. The Other Side of the Asian American Success Story. (San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1995)

    Mahadevi Varma. Translated by Neera Kuckerja Sohoni. Sketches from My Past: Encounters with India's Oppressed. (Boston, MA: Northeastern University Press, 1997)

    Mankekar, Purnima. Screening Culture, Viewing Politics: Television, Womanhood and Nation in Modern India. ( Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2000)

    Zheng, Wang. Women in the Chinese Enlightenment: Oral and Textual Histories. (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, Berkeley, 1999)

     

    Health and Health Care

    Litt, Iris. Taking Our Pulse: The Health of America's Women. (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1997)


    History

    Freedman, Estelle. Maternal Justice: Miriam Van Waters and the Female Reform Tradition. (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1996)

    Gelles, Edith. First Thoughts: Life and Letters of Abigail Adams. (New York, NY: Twayne Publishers, 1998)

    Gelles, Edith. Portia: The World of Abigail Adams. (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1992)

    McCurry, Stephanie. Masters of Small Worlds: Yeoman Households, Gender Relations and the Political Culture of Antebellum South Carolina Low Country. (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1995)

    Offen, Karen. European Feminisms, 1700-1950: A Political History. ( Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2000)

    Schiebinger, Londa. Plants and Empire: Colonial Bioprospecting in the Atlantic World ( Harvard University Press, 2004)
    Yalom, Marilyn. A History of the Breast. (New York, NY: Knopf, 1997)

     

    Science

    Schiebinger, L., (ed.). 2008. Gendered Innovations in Science and Engineering. Stanford University Press, 2008 was published on March 12, 2008.  

    Schiebinger, Londa. Nature's Body: Gender in the Making of Modern Science (Beacon Press, 1993; Rutgers University Press, 2004)

    Schiebinger, Londa. Has Feminism Changed Science? (Harvard University Press, 1999)

    Schiebinger, Londa. The Mind Has No Sex? Women in the Origins of Modern Science (Harvard University Press, 1989)


    Sexuality

    Lewin, Ellen. Inventing Lesbian Cultures in America. (Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1996)

    Mintz, Beth & Rothblum, Esther (eds). Lesbians in Academia: Degrees of Freedom. (New York, NY: Routledge, 1997)

     

     

    Center News

    Opportunities, Grants & Fellowships

    Grants and Prizes

    The Clayman Institute offers the following awards and prizes for individual members of the Stanford community:

     

    For more information, visit: http://www.stanford.edu/group/gender/FundingOpportunities/index.html.

     

    Faculty Research Fellowship Program

     

    Call for Applications: 2010-2011

    Deadline: December 15, 2009

    The Clayman Institute for Gender Research at Stanford University invites applications for residential fellowships for the academic year 2010-2011 from tenured and tenure-track faculty (or the equivalent), and postdoctoral scholars, from the U.S. and international universities.>

    Applications for one, two or three quarters will be considered. Fellows must remain on faculty and be in residence at the Clayman Institute for the duration of their fellowship. Fellowships will be non-stipendiary in 2010-2011, except for the postdoctoral appointment where stipend and benefits will be set and adjusted in accordance with Stanford University rules.

     

    Fellows are provided with faculty-equivalent privileges for using Stanford's library and other facilities, an office at the Institute, and the collegiality of a diverse community of gender scholars from across the spectrum of academic disciplines and ranks.

     

    Thematic Focus: "Reinvigorating the Revolution: Advancing Gender Equality in the Twenty-first Century"

     

    Projects are supported in all disciplines including the humanities, social sciences, science and engineering, business, law, and medicine, among others, so long as they focus centrally on gender. Possible sub-topics include (but are not limited to):

     

    • The gender division of household labor • Families and women's careers: the 2nd shift, opting out, on-ramping, and flexible schedules • Representations of women in culture and history • Gender stereotyping and bias in the workplace • Gendered meanings and practices at work and home • Women's experiences in male-dominated fields, such as science and engineering • Gendered innovations in knowledge: Bringing gender analysis into the practice of science • Gender and culture in history or literature • Advancing women's progress in the professions of business, medicine, and law • Historical and cross-national comparisons of women's educational and occupational progress • Effects of legal mandates (such a Title IX and FMLA) on women's careers • National policies, organizational polices, and work-family balance: what works? • Men's involvement in gender equality movements • Gender, leadership, and entrepreneurship

     

    How to Apply: Applications are to be received in our office by 5:00pm (PST) on Tuesday, December 15, 2009. Instructions and detailed information are available at http://gender.stanford.edu under “Fellowships.”

     


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    Women's Research & Resource Center

    Contact

    350 Spelman Lane
    Atlanta, GA 30314
    Ph. 404/270-5625
    Fx. 404/223-7665
    http://www.spelman.edu/about_us/distinction/womenscenter/index.shtml
    kuumba@spelman.edu
    bsheftall@aol.com

    The WRRC is the first women's research center at a historically Black college and the first one to offer a women 's studies major. Over the course of its 25 year history, with sustained support from the Ford Foundation, the Center has facilitated faculty and student leadership development; collaborated with other departments/programs on and off campus to establish new courses (most recently in the sciences) that address issues of gender and race; established international linkages with universities outside the U.S. to increase their capacity to promote faculty and student development; and hosted a number of conferences that explore the lives of African and African descended women in a variety of cultural contexts.

    Recently Posted

    Employment Opportunities

    Principal Staff

    Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Dir. Women's Research & Resource Center & Anna Julia Cooper Prof. of Women's Studies
    E-mail: bsheftal@spelman.edu

    M. Bahati Kuumba, Dir. Women's Research & Resource Center & Associate Professor
    E-mail: kuumba@spelman.edu

    Ayoka Chenzira, Director of Digital Moving Salon and Professor of Women's Studies
    E-mail: chenzira@spelman.edu

    Monica Melton, Assistant Professor Women's Studies
    E-mail: mmelton2@spelman.edu

    Yvonne Vinson, Program Coordinator
    E-mail: yvinson@spelman.edu

    Areas of Expertise:

    Diversity & Leadership, Awareness & Education, Girls & STEM, Higher Education, Women's, Gender & Feminist Studies, Equality, Diversity & Inclusion, Science, Technology, Engineering & Math (STEM)

    Member Experts:


    Projects & Campaigns

    Feminist Thought & Scholarship

    Sojourner Truth Women's Studies Collective. Founded in 1999, the Sojourner Collective is a feminist organization designed to support not only Comparative Women's Studies majors/minors but all people interested in progressive struggle to end sexist/racist/classist/heterosexist oppression.

     

     

     

     

    Reports & Resources

    Newsletter

     

    Sisters of the Word, bi-annual newsletter.

     

    Center News

    Opportunities, Grants & Fellowships

    Toni Cade Bambara Writer/Scholar/Activist Program and Collective. This unique internship/mentoring program, builds on a long tradition of black feminist scholar/activism at the College. Founded in 1985, this unique student leadership development program was renamed in 1996 in honor of the late scholar/activist Toni Cade Bambara. Bambara's writings and political activism reflected a profound understanding of the interconnections of race, gender, class, and sexuality. This program is designed to attract and help nurture committed students who are interested in becoming scholar/activists.

     

     


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    Project on Women and Social Change

    Contact


    Northampton, MA 01063
    Ph. (413) 585-3591
    Fx. (413) 585-3593
    http://www.smith.edu/wsc
    kgauger@smith.edu


    The Smith College Project on Women and Social Change is an interdisciplinary faculty research group. Founded in 1978, the project draws together faculty from a wide range of disciplines. The project's faculty participants are involved in research and teaching, exploring women's contributions to social change and the ways in which women are affected by change. Members of the project undertake both individual and collaborative research and translate their findings into teaching. The project brings local and international scholars to Smith for various forums including work-in-progress seminars, lectures, conferences, and workshops. Current Smith faculty research projects are focused on: Gender, Authority, and Leadership; Women and Work; and Comparative Studies of Gender, Education, and Public Policy.

    Recently Posted

    Employment Opportunities

    Principal Staff

    Barbara Brehm-Curtis, Acting Director
    Ph. (413) 585-3978
    E-mail: bbrehm@smith.edu

    Kathleen Gauger, Administrative Assistant
    Ph. (413) 585-3591
    E-mail: kgauger@smith.edu

    Areas of Expertise:

    Awareness & Education, Higher Education, Women's, Gender & Feminist Studies

    Member Experts:


    Projects & Campaigns

    Leadership and Leadership Development

    Women on Power: Leadership Redefined. The provocative essays cover a broad range of topics, including the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, global perspectives on women's environmental activism, mothering as a catalyst to social activism, and women in the enclaves of veterinary medicine and sports. 


    Sports and Fitness

    Physical Education and Sport in a Global Context: Honoring the Legacy, Charting the Future. A 50th Anniversary Conference held in the spring of 1999 addressed equity in sports and progress made by female athletes from around the country.

     

     

    Reports & Resources

    Corporate Women

    Managing Lives: Corporate Women and Social Change, Sue J.M. Freeman (1990).


    Employment Issues

    The Whistle-Blowers: Exposing Corruption in Government and Industry, Myron Peretz Glazer and Penina Midgal Glazer (1989).

    Unequal Colleagues: The Entrance of Women Into the Professions, 1890-1940, Penina Midgal Glazer and Miriam Slater (1987).

    The Economics of Comparable Worth, Mark Aldrich and Robert Buchele (1986).


    Environment

    The Environmental Crusaders: Confronting Disaster and Mobilizing Community, Penina Midgal Glazer and Myron Peretz Glazer (1998).


    Feminist Thought and Scholarship

    Learning About Women: Gender, Politics, and Power, edited by Susan C. Bourque et al. (1989).

    Building Domestic Liberty: Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Architectural Feminism, Polly Wynn Allen (1988).

    Women, Welfare and Higher Education: Towards Comprehensive Policies, edited by Martha Ackelsberg, et al. (1988).

    Women Living Change: Cross-Cultural Perspectives, edited by Susan C. Bourque and Donna Robinson Divine (1985).

    Women of the Andes: Patriarchy and Social Change in Two Peruvian Towns, Susan C. Bourque and Kay B. Warren (1981).


    Higher Education

    Women's Place in the Academy: Transforming the Liberal Arts Curriculum, edited by Marilyn Schuseter and Susan Van Dyne (1985).


    History

    Women's History as Women's Education: Essays, Natalie Zemon Davis and Joan Wallach Scott (1985).

    Family Life in Seventeeth Century England: The Verneys of Claydon House, Miriam Slater (1984).


    Politics

    Politics and Society in Ottoman Palestine: The Arab Struggle for Survival and Power, Donna Robinson Divine (1994).

    The Politics of Women's Education: Perspectives from Asia, Africa, and Latin America, edited by Jill Ker Conway and Susan C. Bourque (1993).

    Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and Struggle, Martha Ackelsberg (1991).

     

    Sports

    Women in Intercollegiate Sport: A Longitudinal, National Study Thirty Three Year Update (2010).

     

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    Center for Gender in Organizations

    Contact

    300 The Fenway
    Boston, MA 02115
    Ph. 617-521-3824
    Fx. 617-521-3878
    http://www.simmons.edu/som/centers/cgo/index.php
    cgo@simmons.edu



    The Center for Gender in Organizations (CGO) at Simmons School of Management is an international resource center committed to improving organizational effectiveness by strengthening gender equity for those at work. We understand that gender operates simultaneously with race, class, ethnicity, age, and sexual identity in shaping organizational systems and practices as well as individuals' identities and experiences at work. Our focus is at the intersection of research and practice, and we pursue our mission through action research, consultations, education, convening, and information dissemination.

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    Employment Opportunities

    Principal Staff

    Patricia Deyton, Director
    Specialization: Nonprofit and general management, gender and diversity
    E-mail: patricia.deyton@simmons.edu

    Stacy Blake-Beard, Senior Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Organization behavior, mentoring, diversity
    E-mail: stacy.blakebeard@simmons.edu

    Bonita Betters-Reed, Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Organization behavior, diversity, leadership, entrepreneurship
    E-mail: bonita.betters-reed@simmons.edu

    Joyce Fletcher, Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Organization behavior, leadership, gender
    E-mail: joyce.fletcher@simmons.edu

    Cynthia Ingols, Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Organization behavior, change management, careers
    E-mail: cynthia.ingols@simmons.edu

    Deborah Kolb, Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Negotiation, gender
    E-mail: deborah.kolb@simmons.edu

    Sylvia Maxfield, Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Global economics, corporate social responsibility
    E-mail: sylvia.maxfield@simmons.edu

    Dean Deborah Merrill-Sands, Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Organization behavior, leadership, gender
    E-mail: deborah.merrill-sands@simmons.edu

    Lynda Moore, Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Organization behavior, diversity, leadership, gender
    E-mail: lynda.moore@simmons.edu

    Mary Shapiro, Faculty Affiliate
    Specialization: Communication Strategies, Career Strategies, Public Speaking
    E-mail: mary.shapiro@simmons.edu


















    Areas of Expertise:

    Awareness & Education, Barriers & Opportunities, Discrimination, Diversity & Inclusion, Inclusion, Women's, Gender & Feminist Studies, Equality, Diversity & Inclusion, Women's & Girls' Leadership

    Member Experts:


    Projects & Campaigns

    Events:

    Spring 2010 Speaker Series Lineup:

    February 23rd

    Stacey Blake-Beard, PhD., Oscar Holmes, IV, Todd Jenkins, and Crystal Daugherty 

    “Insights from the Intersection of National Culture and Gender: Exploring the Mentoring Experiences of Indian Women”   

    Time and Place: 4:30pm – 5:50pm, with a reception following. Room M222, Simmons School of Management Building *Validated parking is available on site for $9

     

    April 29th

    Elisabeth Kelan PhD., King's College London  

    “The Binary Logic and Performing Gender at Work”  

    Time and Place: 4:30pm – 5:50pm, with a reception following. Room M222, Simmons School of Management Building *Validated parking is available on site for $9  

     

    May 18th

    Laura Morgan Roberts, Ph.D., Faculty Affiliate, Center for Gender in Organizations Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Managerial Sciences, Georgia State University 

    "Race, Gender and the Construction of Positive Identities at Work."   

    Time and Place: 4:30pm – 5:50pm, with a reception following. Room M222, Simmons School of Management Building *Validated parking is available on site for $9

     

    Projects:

    To learn about specific projects on any of the following themes, please visit the CGO website at http://www.simmons.edu/som/centers/cgo/index.php.

    Leadership

    CGO is unpacking the topic of leadership to illuminate under-researched and under-recognized aspects of leadership and to give voice to the experiences and knowledge of women leaders of varied racial, class, ethnic, national, and sexual identities, largely marginalized until now. In particular, several projects on Latina leaders are underway or being developed.


    Institutional Transformation/Gender Equity and Organizational Effectiveness

    Rather than seeing gender as a problem that individual women confront at work, we see gender as embedded in an organization's culture. CGO helps organizations deal with these subtle gender dynamics by identifying the work practices that contribute to the bias and inequities that hinder organizational effectiveness. Recently CGO faculty edited the Reader in Gender, Work and Organization (Blackwell Publishers, forthcoming) that presents an alternative conceptual approach to gender in the workplace. by considering classic and newer topics in management education - leadership, negotiation, human resource management, organizational change, diversity, and globalization - from fresh perspectives.

    Virtual Work

    Given the speed and scope of technological change in workplaces, CGO is exploring the implications for gender equity and whether the embedded gender dynamics observed in more traditional organizations are replicated as organizations move into virtual work or are founded as virtual organizations.


    Working with Differences

    Building on the theme of addressing the intersection of race, class, sexual identity, and gender, CGO has been exploring the possibilities and challenges of building alliances among different social identity groups in order to support and sustain organizational change.


    Globalization

    CGO is developing both conceptual and applied work in the area of global diversity. We are also conducting focused research on the impact of globalization on the dynamics of gender, race, class, sexual identity, and ethnicity within domestic work organizations.

     

    Reports & Resources

    Kolb, Deborah M., Judith Williams, and Carol Frohlinger. 2004. Her Place at the Table: A Woman’s Guide to Negotiating Five Key Challenges to Leadership Success. Jossey-Bass.

    Ely, Robin J., Erica Gabrielle Foldy, Maureen Scully, and The Center for Gender in Organizations, Simmons School of Management, eds. 2003. Reader in Gender, Work, and Organization. Blackwell Publishing.

    Kolb, Deborah M., and Judith Williams. 2003. Everyday Negotiation: Navigating the Hidden Agendas in Bargaining. Jossey-  Bass.
     

    Working Paper Series. Designed to disseminate recent developments in research, theorizing, and practice related to gender and organizational effectiveness.

    CGO Insights. Written for both practitioners and scholars, these short, briefing notes are on topics relevant to promoting organizational effectiveness through strengthening gender equity.

    CGO Speakers Bureau. Faculty give talks regularly on the themes of gender, leadership, power, negotiation, organizational change, and organizational effectiveness to diverse academic and organizational audiences.

    CGO in the Media. Faculty are frequently asked by the popular press for insights and analysis on issues of women, leadership, and management. This is an important mechanism for influencing public discourse on gender, work, and organizations. CGO Consulting Services. CGO engages in consultations and action research projects with organizations interested in examining the ways in which their work norms, values, and practices are gendered and introducing changes that will foster greater equity for both men and women as well as improve organization performance.
    Customized Educational Programs. CGO faculty work with the Simmons School of Management to design and deliver programs that help women understand the systemic nature of gender issues, increase their knowledge and skill in navigating their organizations with confidence, and help them to develop more successful careers. Customized programs include Executive Education courses held at Simmons School of Management and courses conducted onsite at the organizations for which they were developed.

     

     

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