Just 20 years ago, in most states a woman could
not sign an apartment lease, get a credit rating, or apply for a loan unless
her husband or a male relative agreed to
share the responsibility. Similarly, a
1965 study found that fifty one percent of men though women were
"temperamentally unfit for management." There can be no doubt that we have progressed
a long way from these ideas in the last three decades. However, it is also unquestionable that women
in the work force are still discriminated against, sexually harassed, paid less
than men, and suffer from occupational sex segregation and fears of failure as
well as fears of success. We will
address all of these concerns in this paper, and look at some well-known court
cases as illustrations.
Anyone who thinks sex discrimination is a thing
of the past only has to ask Muriel Kraszewski or Ann Hopkings to learn
differently. Muriel Kraszewski worked
for State Farm Insurance Company for twelve years and was the leading candidate
for an important promotion. She was
denied the promotion because, her employers said, she had no college degree and
was too much under the control of her husband.
Kraszewski sued the company and won her case, after a nine year battle,
in late January 1988. She was given what
may be the largest sex-bias award in history: up to two hundreds of millions
for 1,113 other female State Farm employees with similar complaints, and
$433,000 for Kraszewski her-self.
Ann Hopkings was one of Price Waterhouse's top
young executives. She had the best
record for getting and maintaining big accounts, but when she came up for a
partnership in 1982, she was denied because several male partners had evaluated
her as "too macho." They
advised her to walk, talk, and dress more femininely. In response, Hopkings quit the firm and filed
suit under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which forbids employers to
discriminate on the basis of a person's sex.
In May 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that
Price Waterhouse had based its decision on unlawful sex stereotyping. The decision shifted the legal burden of
proof to the employer, which should make it easier for employees to win future
Title VII cases. Experts say that the
decision's main affect may be to force companies to eliminate bias in the
people making important personnel decisions for them. The decision was a landmark for
anti-discrimination, but we should not overemphasize its power. Even now, after a long and expensive court
battle, only twenty eight of Price Waterhouse's nine hundred partners are
women.
One avenue of reform which the U.S. Supreme
Court has long supported is the use of affirmative action plans. On March 25, 1987 the court ruled that the
public transportation agency of Santa Clara County, California was justified in
given a road dispatcher's job to Diana Joyce rather than a man. Joyce scored two points lower on a test than
the man did, but a panel of supervisors found her to be otherwise just as
qualified.
The decision was based on the fact that the
agency's affirmative action plan met the court's three criteria for
fairness. The plan was flexible,
temporary, and designed to gradually correct the imbalance in the
overwhelmingly white male work force.
The Reagan administration had taken the position that affirmative action
plans were only permissible if they addressed individual victims of actual
discrimination. The Supreme Court
clearly disagreed, but it was careful to point out that employers did not have
to have an affirmative action plan, nor were they precluded from hiring the
most qualified candidate for a given position.
Closely linked to sex discrimination in the job
market, are sex segregation of occupations and wage inequalities. A recent article in the "Monthly Labor
Review" noted that, "sex segregation continues to characterize the
american workplace, despite the changes that have occurred in some
occupations. Millions of women continue
to work in a small number of almost totally female clerical and service occupations,
and men continue to make up the majority of workers in the majority of
occupations."
The National Academy of Science published a
study in 1986 on the cause, extent, and future direction of sex
segregation. The study found that
women's occupational options have increase significantly during the last
decade, and that the overall index of occupational segregation had decreased by
almost ten percent between 1972 and 1981, which is more than in any other
decade in the century. The sharpest
gains in the number of women employed were in the following jobs: lawyer,
pharmacist, bank manager, typesetter, insurance adjuster, postal clerk, bus
driver, and janitor.
The bad news is that even with a ten percent
drop, the index of segregation is still about 60, which means that
approximately thirty percent of workers would have to move into a job category
dominated by the opposite sex to even things out. Furthermore, Barbara R. Reskin, a sociologist
at The University of Illinois, says that twelve occupations in which women have
made the greatest gains are merely part of an economic pattern in which
prestige, career opportunities, and pat fall because of automation or some
other factor, causing men to leave and allowing women to move in. A good example of this trend is bank
tellers. Before World War II, most
tellers were male and made good money.
After the war and with the advent of increased automation, salaries fell
and men left the occupation. Today,
ninety five percent of bank tellers are female and make an average of $7.26 per
hour.
Women dominate the clerical, teaching, and
service professions, and men still dominant everything else. Some people argue that women limit themselves
to these jobs voluntarily, because of sex differences or personality
traits. However, the scientific evidence reviewed by the
National Academy of Sciences does not support this view. Instead, it suggest that women face
discrimination and institutional barriers such that "opportunities that
women encounter in the labor market and in pre-market training and education
constrain their choices to a narrow set of alternatives."
Thus, it is apparent that discrimination plays
a significant role in maintaining a sex- segregated work force. Encouragingly, the evidence also shows that
the mere existence of anti- discrimination laws may help foster change, either
because employers fear reprisals for bias or because such laws help reshape
their expectations about what it is acceptable for women to do.
Indeed, companies will be force to re-examine
their discriminatory hiring practices, not by the law, but by sharp
demographics. The fact is that over
eighty percent of the growth in the labor force for the rest of the century
will be due to women, minorities and immigrants. As the "baby bust" follows the
"baby boom," there will be less young white male workers, and experts
say that it will be mostly women who will take up the slack. Therefore, companies had better be prepared
to recruit, train and promote them. As
journalist Elizabeth Ehrlich puts it, "The years of picky hiring are
over."
The question is, will women continue to be
willing to earn $0.64 for every dollar a man earns? Employers who pay woman less than men for the
same job are less numerous every year, but as long as the sexual division of
labor persists, the pay for predominantly female jobs will be less than for
predominantly male jobs. This, of
course, is the basis of the argument for comparable worth. In 1981, the Supreme Court mandate that women
should get equal pay for equal work, but the issue of equal pay for comparable
work id still hotly debated. So far, the
only way for a woman to earn as much as a man is to enter a traditionally male
field. As we have seen, women have made
some progress in this direction, and although we are still far from anything
approaching equality, many people are hopeful that the growing personnel needs
and the shortage of young white males may contribute to a narrowing of the wage
gap.
Working in a male-dominated field is not
without its dangers, though and chief among these is sexual harassment. Sexual harassment remains a huge problem for
many women in predominantly male occupations.
A vivid illustration of the problem is the case of Catherine
Broderick. Broderick was a lawyer at the
Securities Exchange Commission. When she
rejected her supervisor's sexual advances and openly disapproved of the special
treatment accorded those who went along with him, she was denied promotion for
nine years.
After filing an internal complaint and getting
no results, Broderick filed suit in a federal district court in 1987. A year later, judge John H. Pratt announced a
verdict which expanded civil rights protection against sexual harassment. Pratt said Broderick was "the victim of
a sexually hostile environment," which he defined as "unwelcome
sexual advances, request for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical
conduct of a sexual nature are so pervasive that they create an offensive
workplace environment." He awarded
her $88,000 in back pay and interest, an immediate promotion according with her
experience, the choice of two jobs at the agency, her attorney's fees, and an
allowance for counseling, as well as prohibiting the agency from retaliating
against her should she choose to remain there.
As if sexual discrimination, sex segregation,
and sexual harassment were not enough, many working women also suffer from
something called the "imposter phenomenon" which involves both fear
of failure and fear of success. The imposter
phenomenon occurs when a person feels like a phony, despite outward evidence to
the contrary. The fear of failure
involves thoughts like "this time I will not be able to do it. I will be
found out.," and is rooted in a lack of self-confidence or poor self-
concept, both of which are common among women.
The fear of success is more complex. It is linked to sex stereotypes and
traditional belief systems. Psychologist
suzanne Imes says, "many women are afraid that they will not be linked by
others if they are seen as powerful and as using their power to affect other
people's lives. They have a conflict
between their need for power and their need for affiliation. If a person persists in feeling like an
imposter, she can imagine that she is not as powerful as she really is and can
thus avoid the negative consequences she fears."
Most women who suffer from the imposter
phenomenon do not actually sabotage their careers, but it is certain that some
do. It seems especially tragic for women
to sabotage themselves when they have the external problems of discrimination,
segregation, low pay and sexual harassment to face, but perhaps the external
battles cannot be completely win until the internal battles are settled once
for all.
ENDNOTES
1 Madura Christopher, "America's Women:
Meeting the challenges of today" Scholastic Update 119 (May 18, 1987): 5.
2 "State Farm is Stuck with a Colossal
Claim," U.S. News & World Report 104
(February 1, 1988): 10.
3 Andrea Sachs, "A slap at sex
stereotypes," Time 133 (May 15, 1989): 66.
4 Ibid., 66.
5 Paula Dryer, "Affirmative Action: After
the debate, Opportunity," Business
Week (February 13, 1987): 36.
6 Ibid., 36.
7 "Sex Segregation," Monthly Labor
Review 109 (February 14, 1986): 2.
8 Ibid., 2.
9 Aaron Bernstein, "So You Think You Have
Come A Long Way, Baby?," Business Week (February 29, 1988): 49.
10 "Sex Segregation," 2.
11 Dryer, 36.
12 Elizabeth Ehrlich and Susan Garland,
"For American Business, a New World of Workers," Business week (September 19, 1988): 112.
13 Christopher, 7.
14 Lois Romano, "Winning is The Best
Revenge," Good House-keeping 208 (April 1, 1989): 49.
15 Ibid., 53.
16 Suzanne Imes and Pauline Rose,"
Treatment of the Imposter Phenomenon in High- Achieving Women," Women
Therapists Working With Women, ed. Claire M. Brody (New York: Springs
Publishing Company, Inc. 1984).
17 Ibid., 84.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bernstein, Aaron.
"So You Think You Have Come A Long Way, Baby?." Business Week (February 29, 1988): 48-52.
Christopher.
Madura. "America's Women: Meeting the Challenges of today." Scholastic Update 119 (May 18, 1987): 5-7.
Dryer, Paula.
"Affirmative Action: After the Debate, Opportunity." Business Week (April 13, 1987): 36.
Ehrlich,
Elizabeth and Garland, Susan. "For American Business, A New World of
Workers." Business Week (September 19, 1988): 112-118.
Imes, Suzanne and
Clance, Pauline Rose. "Treatment of the Imposter Phenomenon in High- Achieving Women." Women Therapists Working With Women, ed.
Claire M. Brody, 69-85. New York: Spring
Publishing Company, Inc., 1984.
Romano, Lois.
"Winning is the Best Revenge."
Good Housekeeping 208 (April 1989): 46-53.
Sachs, Andrea.
"A Slap at Sex Stereotypes."
Time 133 (May 15, 1989): 66.
"Sex
Segregation." Monthly Labor Review
109 (February 1986): 2.
"State Farm
is Stuck With a Colossal Claim."
U.S. News & World Report 104 (February 1, 1988): 10.
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