Women\u27s right to equal employment opportunity has been recognized virtually worldwide. In fact, one-third of the total world labor force consists of women.\u27 As the higher echelons in employment are reached, however, the number of positions occupied by women tapers off dramatically.2 Thus, while the right to equal employment opportunity is acknowledged, enforcement remains a formidable challenge. Although facially similar laws prohibiting discrimination in the recruitment, promotion and working conditions of women have been enacted by United Nations member countries, the United States, the European Community and Japan, the difference between equality in law and equality in fact lies with their implementation
For decades, the world has seen legal, policy and practical interventions to advance women’s rights....
We are familiar with ‘equality before the law\u27 and ‘one-person-one-vote’ as standards of the righ...
Occupational segregation by sex and the systemic undervaluation of jobs held by women are historic f...
Women\u27s right to equal employment opportunity has been recognized virtually worldwide. In fact, o...
In 1995, the United Nations reported “in no society today do women enjoy the same opportunities as m...
Employment and a concomitant opportunity to compete on the basis of individual merit for the rewards...
The special concerns of the growing number of women entering the global workforce are shaping the de...
In April, 1986 the Japanese Equal Employment Opportunity Law went into effect. This law prohibits ge...
[Excerpt] Equal pay is a family issue. Women make up nearly half of the U.S. labor force and are a g...
[Excerpt] This issue contains a collection of articles from 13 jurisdictions which examine various i...
[Excerpt] The Equal Pay Act was signed in 1963, requiring that men and women in the same workplace b...
This piece was submitted in connection with the 2022 Symposium The Equal Rights Amendment: A New Gua...
Well into the twenty-first century, achieving gender equality in the economy remains unfinished busi...
In this contribution, I am interested in how discrimination issues are manifested in employment rela...
This Note explores the global problem of gender-based labor inequality as exemplified in China. Chin...
For decades, the world has seen legal, policy and practical interventions to advance women’s rights....
We are familiar with ‘equality before the law\u27 and ‘one-person-one-vote’ as standards of the righ...
Occupational segregation by sex and the systemic undervaluation of jobs held by women are historic f...
Women\u27s right to equal employment opportunity has been recognized virtually worldwide. In fact, o...
In 1995, the United Nations reported “in no society today do women enjoy the same opportunities as m...
Employment and a concomitant opportunity to compete on the basis of individual merit for the rewards...
The special concerns of the growing number of women entering the global workforce are shaping the de...
In April, 1986 the Japanese Equal Employment Opportunity Law went into effect. This law prohibits ge...
[Excerpt] Equal pay is a family issue. Women make up nearly half of the U.S. labor force and are a g...
[Excerpt] This issue contains a collection of articles from 13 jurisdictions which examine various i...
[Excerpt] The Equal Pay Act was signed in 1963, requiring that men and women in the same workplace b...
This piece was submitted in connection with the 2022 Symposium The Equal Rights Amendment: A New Gua...
Well into the twenty-first century, achieving gender equality in the economy remains unfinished busi...
In this contribution, I am interested in how discrimination issues are manifested in employment rela...
This Note explores the global problem of gender-based labor inequality as exemplified in China. Chin...
For decades, the world has seen legal, policy and practical interventions to advance women’s rights....
We are familiar with ‘equality before the law\u27 and ‘one-person-one-vote’ as standards of the righ...
Occupational segregation by sex and the systemic undervaluation of jobs held by women are historic f...