McDonald’s employees stage first #MeToo strike to bring attention to sexual harassment
Hundreds of cooks, cashiers and workers from McDonald’s, inspired by the #MeToo movement, staged a strike outside company headquarters in Chicago this week protesting sexual harassment in the workplace. Strikes occurred in 10 cities across the country in response to 10 McDonald’s employees who filed charges against the company, according to Fight for $15. The protesters called for more respect in the workplace, better training for managers and more accountability.
Research: Simple Prompts Can Get Women to Negotiate More Like Men, and Vice Versa
Men, and Vice Versa
New research from Harvard suggests that the likelihood of turning to unethical behavior or lying during negotiations is strongly related to gender: men are more likely to act deceptively, and women are more likely to opt for an empathetic approach. But the findings also indicated that both men and women could “activate” the competitiveness and empathic motives in certain bargaining situations.
For women at startups, the equity gap is worse than the pay gap
According to a study by ownership management platform Carta, women hold just 47¢ for every equity dollar that men have. And the equity pay gap gets worse for female founders: Of the 15,000 founders surveyed, 13 percent were women, but they only owned 6 percent of founder equity; they have 39¢ for every dollar of equity held by male founders. One possible reason men hold onto more equity dollars is that early-stage companies are more likely to be founded by men.
ACLU says Facebook ads let employers favor men over women
WIRED reports that the American Civil Liberties Union says Facebook is allowing employers to discriminate against women. The ACLU filed a charge Tuesday with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, claiming that Facebook violated labor and civil rights laws by allowing employers to target ads to men, to the exclusion of women and gender-nonbinary job-seekers. A spokesperson for Facebook told WIRED that, “There is no place for discrimination on Facebook; it’s strictly prohibited in our policies. We look forward to defending our practices once we have an opportunity to review the complaint.”









