Glass Ceiling - Explained
What is the Glass Ceiling?
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What is the Glass Ceiling?
The glass ceiling refers to a barrier that makes professional advancement difficult for a section of employees. The glass ceiling often affects women and the minority section of employees. This term is a metaphorical term that denotes an invisible barrier shielding a given section of employees from being promoted to managerial positions or executive levels. The glass ceiling restricts employees who are qualified from rising above a specific hierarchical position of a company. Such barriers are not company policies but sheer biases that prevent a particular demography of employees, usually women and minorities from rising to the peak of their career.
Where did the term, Glass Ceiling, come from?
The term "glass ceiling" first appeared in 1986 Wall Street Journal article in 1986 describing the difficulties women face in obtaining certain positions. When it was first used, it was a feminist term that reflects the invisible barriers that block women from rising to the top or making professional advancement. More recently, the glass ceiling has been studied to not affect just women but also minorities. Studies have also revealed that such barriers do not exist due to corporate policies but rather exist as a result of implicit biases created by sex, race, ethnicity, religion, age and political affiliation. Despite that there is no law of any country that approves of the glass ceiling, these barriers exist in organizations around the world. Companies and organizations have however started paying attention to the glass ceiling by ensuring that qualified employees are promoted accordingly and participate in the decision-making process of organizations.
The Glass Ceiling in the United States
There are also cultural beliefs that contribute to the glass ceiling in many countries. Many cultures believe that women should do more indoor activities than be allowed to participate actively in the workforce. The women are then relegated to household chores than taking professional positions. In a 2005 report, women make almost half of the workforce in the United States but less than 10% of the women rise to managerial roles or executive positions. A 2017 study also showed that in about 500 big companies in the US, only 24 of them have female CEOs. In order to identify and tackle the barriers that prevent qualified women and minorities from being promoted to managerial and executive positions in the U.S, the United States Department of Labor established the Glass Ceiling Commission in 1991.
Related Topics
- Employment Discrimination (Intro)
- What is Employment Discrimination?
- Glass Ceiling
- What are the major Employment Discrimination laws?
- Civil Rights Act of 1866 (1981 Actions)
- Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)
- Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
- The Rehabilitation Act
- Job Accommodation Network
- Genetic Information Non-Discrimination Act (GINA)
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
- Affordable Care Act (ACA)
- Uniform Service Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA)
- Sexual Orientation and Identification
- What is Affirmative Action?
- What is employment discrimination protection under state law?
- Overview of Title VII (Civil Rights Act of 1964)
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- What is employment discrimination under Title VII?
- How are Title VII protections enforced?
- Wrongful Termination Claim
- Disparate Treatment
- Disparate Impact
- What is race discrimination under Title VII?
- What is national origin discrimination under Title VII?
- What is religious discrimination Under Title VII?
- What is sex discrimination under Title VII?
- What is sexual harassment or Hostile work environment under Title VII?
- Quid Pro Quo
- What is pregnancy discrimination under Title VII?
- Equal Pay Act of 1963