{"id":646,"date":"2015-05-25T20:00:29","date_gmt":"2015-05-25T20:00:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/?p=646"},"modified":"2016-02-01T10:56:43","modified_gmt":"2016-02-01T15:56:43","slug":"experiences-from-two-dc-based-thinktankers-women-led-organisations-and-the-critical-importance-of-recognising-care-work","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/articles\/experiences-from-two-dc-based-thinktankers-women-led-organisations-and-the-critical-importance-of-recognising-care-work\/","title":{"rendered":"Experiences from two DC-based Thinktankers: Women-led Organisations and the Critical Importance of Recognising Care Work"},"content":{"rendered":"
[Editor\u2019s note: This is the fourth\u00a0post from the series on\u00a0Women in Think Tanks, edited by Meghan Froehner. This post\u00a0was written by Meghan, based on interviews with\u00a0Claudia Williams<\/a>, of the\u00a0Washington Area Women\u2019s Foundation<\/a>, and\u00a0Tiffany Boiman<\/a>, of the\u00a0Women\u2019s Bureau of the U.S. Department of Labor<\/a><\/em>.]<\/em><\/p>\n For our fourth\u00a0contributor post (fourth in the series), DC-based researchers were interviewed about their experience working in think tanks. Claudia Williams of the Washington Area Women\u2019s Foundation has worked in Washington, DC for over 8 years, most of which with a think tank working on women\u2019s policy. Tiffany Boiman*, currently with the Women\u2019s Bureau at the U.S. Department of Labour, has also spent several years working at DC based think tanks in addition to other research-based work.\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n Both Williams and Boiman have spent the majority of their careers working in women-led organisations that also focused primarily on research and policy from a gender perspective. This background gives them a unique perspective on the role of women in think tanks and provides an insight into how women-led think tanks may differ.<\/p>\n Throughout my discussions with Boiman and Williams, they both consistently cited having the flexibility to balance care responsibilities with paid work as a major determinant of how gender plays out in the work place. Other important themes that the researchers addressed were the role of mentorship and supports for junior and mid-level women and unconscious bias both from individuals and internalised into workplace policies.<\/p>\n A major theme in the interviews (and in the commentary of nearly all of this series\u2019 contributors) is how workers navigate balancing care work with professional work hours and commitments. Although there are important gender issues, like discrimination, that affect all women in the work place, succeeding at work is particularly challenging for women with care responsibilities.<\/p>\n Tiffany Boiman pointed to how care responsibilities fall disproportionately on women, not only for children but also for sick or elderly relatives.\u00a0Time use studies for the United States<\/a>\u00a0show that women are still spending 75% more time carrying out child care and housework activities than men, with men on average working more, but among non-employed individuals women were also doing significantly\u00a0more housework and childcare<\/a>. Because of these trends, we see that the burden of care responsibility, although also relevant for men, is an issue that affects women disproportionately and as such is central to our discussion on women in think tanks.<\/p>\n As a parent of two small children, Boiman was able to comment on her personal experience of balancing care work with her career. Having young children, or other care responsibilities like a sick relative or aging parent, is a critical time in many women\u2019s careers when they are forced to make tough decisions that can have implications on their career trajectory and income for decades to come. Boiman cited her ability to take on part-time work that offered the option for telework as critical to her ability to stay in the work force while also being able to provide care for her children.<\/p>\n Being able to engage in part-time flexible work was a way to stay connected to the workforce and avoid sliding backwards after many years of education and career progression. For Boiman, working at a women\u2019s policy organisation likely made negotiating flexible work preferences easier than in other contexts. Although she was able to exercise options for flexible work arrangements and experienced receptivity in structuring her schedule around her need to carry out care responsibilities, she pointed out that it was an arrangement and work environment she sought out diligently and that that type of flexibility is hard to access in many organisations. Citing a\u00a0Pew study that reveals 71%\u00a0<\/a>of mothers are engaged in the labour force and\u00a040% of households with children are primarily supported by a women worker<\/a>, Boiman pointed to the need for a serious recognition of the prevalence and importance of women workers and how they support their families, financially, emotionally, and otherwise. If American policy makers are serious about improving the lives and well-being of children and families, supports for working mothers are a critical piece of that puzzle.<\/p>\n Another common phenomena that Boiman mentioned, which can serve as a barrier for women successfully taking leave and flex-work and returning after, is the differentiated perceptions of men and women when they take time out for care work. She cited a study by\u00a0Michelle Budig<\/a>, which showed that women could suffer a 4% decrease in their earnings for each child they have, while men stand to gain a 6% salary increase by becoming fathers.<\/p>\nThe thinktankers<\/h2>\n
Care as a recurring theme<\/strong><\/h2>\n