Despite workplace gains for women, gender stereotypes continue worldwide. A large study explains how social roles keep them ...
More women are feeling ‘left out and less optimistic’ as U.S. workplaces are ‘deprioritizing’ their career advancement, a new ...
Though the current political climate minimizes the importance of workplace equality and inclusivity to the point of erasing language that even hints at these principles in federal agencies, workplace ...
For every 100 men promoted, only 81 women are promoted, a number that gets worse for many women of color. This gap persists over time. More women than men continue to pursue higher education, yet ...
Weaponized incompetence has long been a problem for women in the workforce and at home. Now there's just a word for it. Illustration: HuffPost; Photos: Getty Images “Weaponized incompetence”: It came ...
Sarah Chavarria walked into a meeting with her board of directors, sat down and said: “We need to talk about menopause.” Never mind that the board was almost all older men at that 2023 meeting, one of ...
NPR's Kathryn Fink and Jordan Marie Smith talk about why Broadcast News still resonates in conversations about women and ambition.
Nell Merlino knows the one thing men do better at work than women. The former head of Count Me In for Women’s Economic Independence, a not-for-profit business resource for women, Merlino, 61, worked ...
Women have long had to strike a Goldilocks balance at work — not too harsh, not too soft. Now some are using AI to help get the tone just right. Why it matters: Smart chatbot use is more of a shortcut ...
Maury Thompson shares historical accounts of the exploits of courageous women in the Adirondacks in the late 1800s.
“Weaponized incompetence”: It came on like a whisper on TikTok, then you couldn’t escape hearing the phrase across the app and on other social media sites. Weaponized incompetence ― or “strategic ...