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The concept "Glass Ceiling" originally was first
used in 1986, when 2 Wall Street Journal reporters coined the phrase
to describe the invisible and artificial barriers that impeded women
from advancing to senior leadership positions in organizations.
Since then, the metaphor of the glass ceiling has also come to be
applied to the advancement of minorities, deaf, blind, disabled,
and sexual minorities. It is unmistakable that ceilings and walls
exist throughout most workplaces for minorities and women. These
barriers limit the development and mobility opportunities of men
and women of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds.
What are types of Glass Ceiling barriers?
- Lack of management commitment to establish systems, policies,
and practices for achieving workplace diversity and upward mobility;
- Pay inequities for work of equal or comparable value;
- Sex, race, and ethnic-based stereotyping and harassment;
- Lack of family-friendly workplace policies;
- Parent-track policies;
- Limited opportunities for advancement to decision-making positions;
Such barriers prevent minorities and women from
reaching positions where
they can even see a glass ceiling.
"The glass ceiling is a barrier not only to individuals
but to society as a whole. This barrier reduces the potential pool
of corporate leaders by ignoring, or worse, discriminating against
over one-half of the population. The barrier prevents new leaders
from bringing new foundations of creativity and insight to our economy.
At BreakTheGlassingCeiling.com
our agenda is to bring compete productively to today's global marketplace.
We must let loose the full latent potential of the American work
force.
The time has come to break our boundaries and break the glass ceiling."
-Dakotta J.K.
Alex
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Copyright 2008
© Break the Glass Ceiling Foundation
A 501c3 Non-Profit | U.S. Section 508 Compliant. |