Glass ceiling (Employment discrimination)

Enlarge text Shrink text
  • Topic
| מספר מערכת 987007564051105171
Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
תקרת הזכוכית (אפליה בתעסוקה)
Name (Latin)
Glass ceiling (Employment discrimination)
Name (Arabic)
سقف زجاجي (تمييز في التوظيف)
Other forms of name
Ceiling, Glass (Employment discrimination)
See Also From tracing topical name
Career plateaus
Discrimination in employment
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q1048886
Library of congress: sh2006004750
Sources of Information
  • Work cat.: Breaking the glass ceiling: can women reach the top of America's largest corporation? 1987.
  • MSN Encara online, June 15, 2006(barrier to career advancement: an unofficial but real impediment to somebody's advancement into upper-level management positions because of discrimination based on the person's gender, age, race, ethnicity, or sexual preference)
  • Lockwood, N.R. The Glass ceiling, June 2004, viewed online June 15, 2006(The term"glass ceiling" was coined in a 1986 Wall Street Journal report on corporate women by Hymowitz and Schellhardt. The glass ceiling is a concept that most frequently refers to barriers faced by women who attempt, or aspire, to attain senior positions ... in corporations, government, education and nonprofit organizations. It can also refer to racial and ethnic minorities and men when they experience barriers to advancement)
1 / 1
Wikipedia description:

A glass ceiling is a metaphor usually applied to women, used to represent an invisible barrier that prevents a given demographic from rising beyond a certain level in a hierarchy. The metaphor was first used by feminists in reference to barriers in the careers of high-achieving women. It was coined by Marilyn Loden during a speech in 1978. In the United States, the concept is sometimes extended to refer to racial inequality. Racialised women in white-majority countries often find the most difficulty in "breaking the glass ceiling" because they lie at the intersection of two historically marginalized groups: women and people of color. East Asian and East Asian American news outlets have coined the term "bamboo ceiling" to refer to the obstacles that all East Asian Americans face in advancing their careers. Similarly, a multitude of barriers that refugees and asylum seekers face in their search for meaningful employment is referred to as the "canvas ceiling". Within the same concepts of the other terms surrounding the workplace, there are similar terms for restrictions and barriers concerning women and their roles within organizations and how they coincide with their maternal responsibilities. These "Invisible Barriers" function as metaphors to describe the extra circumstances that women go through, usually when they try to advance within areas of their careers and often while they try to advance within their lives outside their work spaces. "A glass ceiling" represents a blockade that prohibits women from advancing toward the top of a hierarchical corporation. These women are prevented from getting promoted, especially to the executive rankings within their corporation. In the last twenty years, the women who have become more involved and pertinent in industries and organizations have rarely been in the executive ranks.

Read more on Wikipedia >