Why women aren’t CEOs, diversity in computing classes and other top gender stories of the week
Image: REUTERS/Reiji Murai
BBC journalist confronts boss about the pay gap, live on air. (Quartz)
Why women aren’t CEOs, according to women who almost were. (New York Times)
How to speed up gender equality in high-growth sectors -- our new report. (World Economic Forum)
Female university graduates dramatically underestimate their worth. (The Independent)
Imagine closing the pay gap by paying everyone equally, like Uber has. (Cnet)
The UK’s gender pay gap by industry. Interactive graphic. (Business Insider)
Women in business profit when they talk with each other. (Quartz)
Nearly half of all murdered women are killed by romantic partners. (The Atlantic)
Computer classes are diversifying. Now, about those jobs. (Wired)
Women’s stories of street harassment. In pictures. (The Guardian)
Why women are almost invisible in Lebanon’s parliament. (Middle East Eye)
The hotline trying to stop men murdering their wives. (Al Jazeera)
Chart of the week: Women in computer science
Women are 27 percent of school students studying college-level computer science in the US, in 2017. Up from 23 percent in 2016.
Source: AP College Board via Code.org.
Quote of the week
“There’s this great myth management promote about treating talent on its separate merits, but it’s all about divide and rule. Now it’s finally been exposed for what it is. A lot of privileged white men giving each other privileged pay. Even without experience.”
Unnamed senior female journalist, BBC
BBC women ‘furious but not surprised’, The Guardian, July 2017
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