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    Under the Bus: How Working Women Are Being Run Over

    Under the Bus: How Working Women Are Being Run Over

    by Caroline Fredrickson


    eBook

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    Customer Reviews

      ISBN-13: 9781620970805
    • Publisher: New Press, The
    • Publication date: 04/07/2015
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 240
    • File size: 406 KB

    Caroline Fredrickson is the president of the American Constitution Society. She has been widely published on a range of legal and constitutional issues and is a frequent guest on television and radio shows. Before joining ACS, Fredrickson served as the director of the ACLU’s Washington legislative office and as general counsel and legal director of NARAL Pro-Choice America. She lives in Washington, D.C.

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments vii

    Introduction 1

    1 The Test of Our Progress: A Brief History of Race, Gender, and Worker Protections in the Twentieth Century 19

    2 The Wages of Discrimination: Paycheck Unfairness 43

    3 Punching the Clock: Part-Time, Just-in-Time, and Overtime 98

    4 The Wild West: The Lawless World of the Contingent Workforce 128

    5 Bye-Bye, Baby: Giving Birth and Back to Work 148

    6 Did Mary Poppins Have Kids? Child Care and the Working Mother 168

    7 Learning Together 190

    Notes 201

    Index 235

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    Most Americans think that our country has done quite a lot to protect women and ensure gender equity in the workplace. After all, we have banned discrimination against women, required equal pay for equal work, and adopted family-leave legislation. But the fact is that we have a two-tiered system, where some working women have a full panoply of rights while others have few or none at all. We allow blatant discrimination by small employers. Domestic workers are cut out of our wage and overtime laws. Part-time workers, disproportionately women, are denied basic benefits. Laws are written through a process of compromise and negotiation, and in each case vulnerable workers were the bargaining chip that was sacrificed to guarantee the policy's enactment. For these workers, the system that was supposed to act as a safety net has become a sieve—and they are still falling through.

    Caroline Fredrickson is a powerful advocate and D.C. insider who has witnessed the legislative compromises that leave out temps, farmworkers, employees of small businesses, immigrants, and other workers who fall outside an intentionally narrow definition of "employees." The women in this fast-growing part of the workforce are denied minimum wage, maternity leave, health care, the right to unionize, and protection from harassment and discrimination—all within the bounds of the law. If current trends continue, their fate will be the future of all American workers.

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    From the Publisher
    "I took furious notes while reading Caroline Fredrickson’s Under the Bus: How Working Women Are Being Run Over…'Furious' because I had to write fast to keep up with information Fredrickson packs into this relatively slim book, and furious because every new thing I learned made the hair on my neck stand on end."
    —Katie McDonough, Salon

    "This is a damn fine book that I will reference frequently and at length, forever…The book is easy to read and it’s easy to recognize myself—and the women I’ve worked with over the years—in its pages."
    —Linda Tirado, Elle

    "This excellent book will contribute to ongoing discussions concerning women in the workplace."
    Booklist

    "Offers up fixes for this broken, exclusive system."
    Mother Jones

    "A call to action for women who have been left behind in the fight to secure fair labor standards."
    Washington Independent Review of Books

    "The most refreshing part about her book is the way Frederickson connects this narrative with her own personal story—that even she, as a policy advocate, didn’t think about low-wage workers until recently."
    Feministing

    "Serves to illustrate how far systemic policy change could go in creating equal opportunity across the board—improving working situations for women."
    Shelf Awareness

    "An informative, occasionally shocking exploration of the state of women’s rights in the workplace."
    Kirkus

    Library Journal
    04/01/2015
    A legal advocate for women in Washington, DC, Fredrickson (president, American Constitution Soc.) shifts the current focus on professional women to those working in the lowest tier of the labor force, who are disproportionately women of color: caregivers, domestic workers, sales clerks, and farm laborers. Despite a considerable number of labor laws and antidiscrimination statutes passed since the 1930s, which Fredrickson describes briefly, these workers still do dangerous work for small wages, without benefits or protection from illegal practices and sexual harassment, thanks to loopholes and lax enforcement. Employers can reclassify workers as part-time or contract labor, eliminating the need to pay benefits. To accommodate family needs, federal law requires only unpaid leave (and for only 12 weeks) for health, family care, or pregnancy; women often can't afford to take this leave. Childcare is unregulated, unreliable, expensive, or unavailable. Fredrickson offers the standard solutions: closing loopholes, more unionization, increased expansive laws, larger investments in early childhood education, and a more effective social movement. She also proposes "shaming" the United States by emphasizing how meager are the benefits offered to families compared to other nations (alas, an unsuccessful tactic so far). VERDICT A readable and concise summary for the curious layperson.—Cynthia Harrison, George Washington Univ., Washington, DC
    Kirkus Reviews
    2015-02-04
    Examination of the inequalities women still face in the workforce.As president of the American Constitution Society and former director of the Washington office of the American Civil Liberties Union, Fredrickson understands the complex laws regarding fairness in labor practices. In this extensive analysis of gender equity and protection in the workplace, the author exposes the large proportion of workers, primarily women of color, who have slipped through the grid of legislative laws and who do not receive the same rights as other working women and, particularly, men. This large group consists of women working part-time or as independent contractors, domestic help taking care of children and/or the elderly, waitresses, hairstylists, office cleaners, receptionists and secretaries, and any others who fill many of the minimum-wage jobs in the United States. Fredrickson examines how current laws have undoubtedly helped many women but still allow this section of society to be excluded from basic practices such as child care and paid maternity. The author uses personal stories to demonstrate the widespread unfairness found in the workforce—e.g., women being fired for getting pregnant or requesting time off to take care of a sick child, those who have suffered sexual harassment, then are fired when they instigate lawsuits against the perpetrator. "We have definitely not reached the promised land," writes the author. "More and more of our jobs lack benefits; fewer of us are part of a union; almost none of us have decent or affordable child care; many are denied sick days or family leave and are forced to sign away their remaining protections to get or keep a job." Women comprise 63.9 percent of "breadwinners or co-breadwinners," and Fredrickson effectively bares all the loopholes and fallacies in America's policies toward this significant, but often underappreciated and underrepresented, piece of the national workforce. Informative, occasionally shocking exploration of the state of women's rights in the workplace.

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