C This
American women got the vote 90 years ago this month. It wasn’t easy. After 70 years of hard state-by-state campaigning, suffrage came down to a final vote in the Tennessee Legislature. The deciding ballot was cast by Harry Burn, a 24-year old who switched to “yes” after receiving a last-minute nudge from his mother. “I know that a mother’s advice is always the safest for a boy to follow,” Burn later said.
Read more about this historic struggle, plus all the news about women and work, in C This.
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Three’s a Charm
Elena Kagan joined the U.S. Supreme Court, and ForbesWoman asked: “Will three finally be the magic number that effects real change for women in terms of pay parity, access to education and sexual harassment in the U.S.?” I hope so, but let’s not stop there. Women make up roughly 51% of the U.S. population. To really reflect America’s diversity on the Supreme Court, let’s see at least one more woman—ideally, a woman of color.
READ: “And Kagan Makes Three,” by Meghan Casserly, ForbesWoman, 8/8/10
Know Before You Go
What can you do to counter gender biases that influence hiring decisions? In this article, Amy Williams lays out four rules, including learning about “illegal questions” and sex discrimination before you go in for the interview.
READ: “Four Ways to Fight Sexist Interviewers,” by Amy Williams, Ms., 8/16/10
Mentored to Death
In the latest edition of the Harvard Business Review, INSEAD’s Herminia Ibarra and Catalyst’s Nancy M. Carter and Christine Silva reveal how high-potential women are not getting enough from mentors. Many are under-sponsored and over-mentored. “I am being mentored to death,” said one exasperated respondent. Are you?
Hear Them Roar
Who are the “new feminists”? The Guardian profiles seven courageous women “who dare to articulate what others would rather not see.” “I receive death threats all the time, but I’m not afraid,” said Shahla Farid, a lawyer who challenges the Taliban.
READ: “The New Feminists: Still Fighting,” by Susie Orbach and Shahesta Shaitly, The Guardian, 8/15/10
Rocking the Vote
What was the biggest obstacle to women’s right to vote in the United States? The U.S. Congress. Gail Collins recounts the long, hard slog to suffrage in this New York Times column. While we celebrate Women’s Suffrage Day on August 26, Collins prefers to commemorate August 18—the day of a tense final showdown in the Tennessee Legislature.
READ: “My Favorite August,” by Gail Collins, The New York Times, 8/13/10
Tags: c this, Elena Kagan, feminism, mentor, sexism, Sponsorship, suffrage, US Supreme Court, voting rights
This entry was posted on Friday, August 20th, 2010 at 8:59 am and is filed under C This. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.



August 22nd, 2010 at 1:44 pm
Hello – I love these article round-ups, but your article link to “the new feminists” goes to a salon cartoon rather than a link to the guardian. I think you mean:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/aug/15/meet-the-new-feminists
Keep these great articles coming!