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Gender Equity: You Can Help Museums Be Leaders on the Equality Front

gender equity

Summit on the United States of Women, the first-ever nomination of a woman candidate for president by a major party, and the President penning an op-ed on his own feminism for a national magazine, isn't it time the museum world got on the bus? Can you imagine if museums were the gold standard for gender equity in the non-profit world? Wouldn't it be remarkable if museums--that are on the cusp of becoming a pink collar profession or one dominated by women and beset by low-paying, undervalued jobs--reversed course and went out of their way to become leaders in gender equity? For over a century the heroines of this field, from Laura Bragg to the Hewitt sisters, to Susan Stitt, and more recently Elaine Heumann Gurian, Adrianne Russell and Monica Montgomery, have worked tirelessly for inclusivity. Each worked or works within her own time and culture, but the goal remains the same: Museums are for all, visitors and employees. Wouldn't it be stunning if rather than being places where only those with entitled parents or partners choose to work, museums were an example to all non-profits for their policies about equal pay, paid sick leave, paid family leave and child care? If you are a museum leader, board member, teacher in a graduate program or an employee, consider what you can do to further the field's gender equity goals within your own organization. That may mean looking at everything from recruitment and hiring policies to work evaluation, to workplace tone, and mentoring. As a result of our session, "What we talk about when we talk about women in museums" at the 2016 American Alliance of Museums conference in Washington, DC in May, Anne Ackerson, Jessica Ferey, Marieke Van Damme, and I want to continue the conversation about gender equity in museums. If you're interested too, we would like to hear from you. If you missed our presentation, you can purchase the session recording here.  (Since a good chunk of the session was audience conversation and report out, the recording might leave you wondering what was happening for 30+ minutes!) But, you can access a free copy of our slides here. Want to Join in the Equity Conversation? At AAM, we also discussed the idea of bringing back some kind of women's caucus--first launched by Susan Stitt in 1972-- and we're continuing to talk about this. One of our ideas is to create a Gender Equity Committee (GenComm) in the coming year. If you would like to help,  please fill out this short contact form and survey, and be sure to tell us what a group like GenComm, if initiated, could do for gender equity in the museum workplace. Once we've heard from everyone, we'll be back in touch with updates about the the way forward. In the meantime, feel free to email us with any questions, comments, or ideas! Enjoy the last weeks of summer, Joan Baldwin with Anne Ackerson, Jessica Ferey, and Marieke Van Damme

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