While this issue of Business Today celebrates the great strides that women have made in the workplace, make no mistake about it -- the glass ceiling still exists. The glass ceiling, of course, ...
The recent exodus of prominent female leaders from the FTSE 100 (Debra Crew at Diageo, Emma Walmsley at GSK and Liv Garfield ...
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — On a night awash in history, Hillary Clinton triumphantly became the first woman to lead a major American political party toward the White House, breaking through a barrier that ...
Over its decade of tracking women’s progress in the workforce, the Economist’s Glass Ceiling Index has registered very little improvement, as gendered structural barriers endure. Protesters march to ...
The proverbial glass ceiling, or the unequal divide between women and men in leadership roles, is often cited as one of the reasons to create a more representative workplace. There is abundant ...
Although women have made gains in representation at the senior level, advancements are slower at the manager and director levels. Rather than hitting a glass ceiling, "the 'broken rung' is the biggest ...
Thanks to the magic of video editing, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton appeared to literally break the "glass ceiling" at the Democratic National Convention Tuesday night. The ceiling ...