A cultural shift for women in leadership roles
A trifecta of events this last week, though seemingly unrelated, have produced a cultural shift in how women are seen in leadership roles.
A trifecta of events this last week, though seemingly unrelated, have produced a cultural shift in how women are seen in leadership roles.
Femme-O-Nomics follows the ups — and downs — of today’s female captains of industry. Here is the latest on Marissa Mayer, Sheryl Sandberg, and Hillary Clinton.
With Pentagon lifting the ban on women from serving in combat, female soldiers can now officially fight with their male counterparts in the frontlines. But does this champion the cause for gender equality?
As the European Commission pushes to set quotas for women on boards to address the gender imbalance issue of its member states, business leaders in the UK have firmly urged the government to oppose the move.
Accenture, a global management consulting company, has found that working women in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are more ambitious than their peers elsewhere in the world.
Although still in its early days, there appears to be an appetite among some men to enter the conversation about gender in the workplace on their own terms.