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Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004
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Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and

Leadership

Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council

March 2004

Page 2: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Where Are We Now?

• Study commissioned by EC Working Women’s Committee in August 2002

Are we taking advantage of the opportunity to organize women?

Are we making enough progress with women leaders?

Page 3: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Women’s Participation in the Workforce and in

Unions is Growing

• Women make up nearly half the workforce.

• 43% of union members, 55% of newly organized workers.

• Between 1990 and 2000, women union members grew by half a million. Increase greatest among African American women.

Page 4: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

We Win More Union Elections with Women Workers and Women

Organizers• 62% wins women majority

• 35% wins women minority

• 82% wins 75% or more women of color

• 55% wins women organizers

• 42% wins male organizers

• 89% wins majority women of color and woman of color as lead or staff organizer

Source: 2003 study by Kate Bronfenbrenner.

Page 5: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Women’s Positive Feelings Toward Unions

are Declining

38%38%

42%

45%

36%

44%

30%

40%

50%

1999 2001 2003

WomenMen

Source: AFL-CIO opinion polling data.

Page 6: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Are We Taking Advantage of the

Opportunity to Organize Women?

Page 7: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Perceptions of Unions

• Unions fight for members, provide job security and help secure raises.

• There is corruption in unions.

Page 8: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Perceptions of Unions

• Equal pay, work & family issues and control over work hours are strongest reasons for joining a union.

Page 9: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Perceptions of Unions

• Women want proof the union can deliver on promises.

Page 10: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Perceptions of Unions

• Self-reliance and individualism resonate among working women.

Page 11: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Perceptions of Unions

• Unions are mainly for men.

• Don’t believe that unions have white collar members.

Page 12: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Recommendations:Focus on Issues of Priority

to Working Women

• Equal pay, control over work hours and work & family issues like paid family leave and child care.

• Highlight work and family issues in bargaining fights.

• Actions about people, not about power and influence.

Page 13: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Recommendations: Show Women Have a

Place in Unions

Page 14: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Recommendations: Show Women Have a

Place in Unions

• Use “unions” or the “union movement,” not “labor.”

• Appoint, recruit and elect more women to leadership positions at all levels.

• Recruit and retain more women organizers.

Page 15: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Recommendations:Address Fears and Doubts

about Unions

• Use examples of worker strength.

• Unions back up women without reducing their independence.

• About workers, not institutions.

Page 16: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Are We Making Enough Progress

with Women Leaders?

Page 17: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Barriers Inhibiting Women from Entering Leadership Positions

• Commitment from unions

• Work and family programs

• Women’s structures and programs

• Mentoring

Page 18: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Recommendations: Commitment from Unions

and Top Leaders

• Establish mandates and policies.

• Ensure women participate in all union events.

• Appoint women to positions with core responsibilities, not as tokens.

• Expand union executive boards to include more women.

Page 19: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Recommendations:Develop Work & Family Programs and Policies

• Child care at union events.

• Hold meetings at times when women can attend.

• Develop family-friendly policies for women leaders.

• Make structural changes.

Page 20: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Recommendations:Develop Structures & Programs for Women

• Create women’s departments and committees.

• Build women’s priority issues into organizing, politics and bargaining.

• Hold smaller, advanced leadership trainings for women.

Page 21: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Recommendations:Help Women Rise as

Leaders

• Identify women and “bring them along” by providing mentoring and individual leadership development at all levels.

Page 22: Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and Leadership Report to the AFL-CIO Executive Council March 2004.

Next Steps

• Where do we go from here?