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13 - Power and the Gender Imperative in Corporate Law

from Part III - Feminist Theories and Corporate Sustainability

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 May 2018

Beate Sjåfjell
Affiliation:
Universitetet i Oslo
Irene Lynch Fannon
Affiliation:
University College Cork
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Summary

Gender plays a critical role in the construction of corporate institutions and the regulatory infrastructure that governs them. The lack of women in executive positions and corporate boardrooms is a direct consequence of a male-dominated history, and so are the laws and norms guiding the institutions that hold positions of power. This Chapter tackle difficult questions related to business and power through the lens of feminist legal theory, and provide an unapologetic and ambitious call to redesign existing power structures, and internal power dynamics, that are leading our world into environmental crises. It begins with a short primer on the social construction of gender, and how society continuously reinforces different behaviour from men and women. The Chapter then examines how gendered predispositions are imbued in the entrenched norms that dominate corporate law, and through implicit biases that prevent or slow the rise of women in the corporate world. These invisible power imbalances need to be widely recognized as they subvert the ability of women to attain meaningful positions of power that instigate change. A critical partnership must be forged between feminist legal theory and corporate sustainability to overcome the formidable challenges in attaining a greener future.
Type
Chapter
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Creating Corporate Sustainability
Gender as an Agent for Change
, pp. 282 - 304
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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