Today's Date: April 18, 2024
Yom HaAliyah: The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews Celebrates Helping Thousands of Jews Make Aliyah in 2023   •   Dr. Cathleen Brown Named Medical Director of Winona, Pioneering Menopause Telehealth Company   •   Wheels in Motion: Nationwide Ride of a Life Time Cycling Event Set for April 27 to Support Children's Health   •   Sundial Media Group Extends Its Reach, Further Diversifying the Media Landscape   •   WK Kellogg Co and Meijer Donate $50,000 to Battle Creek Public Schools Mission Tiger   •   CF Industries Holdings, Inc. Declares Quarterly Dividend and Confirms Dates for First Quarter 2024 Results and Conference Call   •   Semrush Holdings, Inc. Announces Investor Conference Call to Review First Quarter 2024 Financial Results   •   Targeting A Solution Panel Aims to Find Solutions for the Veteran Suicide Crisis with National Thought Leaders Tulsi Gabbard, Ti   •   Angels Helpers NYC Announces 2024 Charity Gala “Big City, Big Hearts: New Yorkers Helping New Yorkers”   •   Genome-wide association analyses identify 95 risk loci and provide insights into the neurobiology of post-traumatic stress disor   •   SuperWomen Of FMS Leadership Award Nominations Now Open   •   First Annual U.S.-Ukraine Veterans' Charity Golf Tournament Announced with General Retired David Petraeus as Guest of Honor   •   Innovafeed Expands to U.S.; French Agtech Firm Opens Insect Innovation Center in Decatur, Ill.   •   Nationally Syndicated “The Bert Show” Hosts Candid Interview with Usher, Who Credits Top Morning-Drive Radio Intervi   •   Franklin Covey Announces New Common Share Purchase Plan   •   Bright Horizons Family Solutions Announces Date of First Quarter 2024 Earnings Release and Conference Call   •   Dr. Laurie Leshin, Director of JPL, to Receive THE MUSES of the California Science Center Foundation 2024 Woman of the Year Awar   •   RepTrak Announces 2024 Global RepTrak® 100 Report   •   The UAE’s Largest Higher Education Institution, Higher Colleges of Technology, Selects YuJa Video Platform to Serve More t   •   Canada brings the world together in pursuit of an ambitious global deal to end plastic pollution
Bookmark and Share

Rutgers Business School launches Center for Women in Business to empower women in the workplace

Rutgers Business School launches Center for Women in Business to empower women in the workplace

New research center has goals of fostering inclusion and diversity in business

PR Newswire

NEWARK, N.J., Feb. 25, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Rutgers Business School announces the launch a new Center for Women in Business that will combine the power of academic research and the resources of a committed alumni network to make an impact on gender equity in the business world.

The new Center for Women in Business at Rutgers Business School will work to foster inclusion and diversity in the workplace. Credit: Getty Images.

With insightful and innovative thought leadership, the center will work to influence change on problems such as the gender wage gap while also providing opportunities to empower working women and to develop women business leaders at both the undergraduate and graduate levels.

"Study after study has demonstrated that women are not equally compensated or represented at any level of business," said Lisa Kaplowitz, a professor of professional practice in finance and the center's founding director. "We are really excited about the prospect of combining the talent of our alumni, faculty and students to remove barriers and empower women to lead in a continuously evolving workforce."

The new center will build on the existing efforts and organizations at Rutgers Business School and Rutgers University to touch more women, both students and alumnae, in bigger and bolder ways through mentoring, workshops, scholarships and conferences.

Sangeeta Rao, an assistant dean of mentoring at Rutgers Business School who took charge of an undergraduate program called Women BUILD (Business Undergraduates in Leadership Development) five years ago, has seen the transformative power of the program to build skills and confidence in groups of young women who support one another and are cultivated by a larger community of professional women.

"We hope to build on the program's success and extend its reach beyond undergraduates," said Rao, who worked closely with Kaplowitz to create the center. 

The underlying strength of the center is a thought leadership loop that encompasses alumni, corporations, faculty and students. Marketing professor Kristina Durante will lead the research initiatives in an effort to promote gender equity, influence business practices and foster women's leadership and entrepreneurship.

"The research will really form the foundational part of the center," Durante said. "We need the research to build the knowledge that will be the basis of conferences and workshops and will guide best practices in the workplace."

Some of the research topics Durante plans to examine include:

  • How participation in youth sports influences women's risk-taking and perseverance
  • How non-conscious biases lead to same gender favoritism in the workplace
  • The critical role of male mentors in women's business success

The ambitious mission of the center has attracted strong support from Rutgers Business School Dean Lei Lei, faculty, and students as well as alumni and friends from across the region's business community.

A 13-member advisory board, composed of alumni and other business professionals, will help guide the center's efforts. One of the its first events will be a women's conference in the spring, but part of its mission is also to host workshops, mentoring programs, networking sessions and professional development programs.

Adam Feigenbaum, an executive at iCIMS who sits on the advisory board, said he and other board members are excited about the potential of the center to make real change. "We're interested and invested in helping the women from Rutgers Business School get better opportunities," Feigenbaum said. "The idea of fundamentally changing the way employers are thinking about diversity and inclusion in their businesses through research is also very exciting."

That is the goal of Kaplowitz and Durante.

"We are partnering together to use the experience in business to fuel research and professional development in order to create best practices in corporations," Kaplowitz said. "At the same time, we are bringing all of this, including our alumni's professional expertise, back to our students to create a broader and deeper pipeline of talent and a continuous feedback loop for all of us."

 

Cision View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/rutgers-business-school-launches-center-for-women-in-business-to-empower-women-in-the-workplace-301010582.html

SOURCE Rutgers Business School-Newark and New Brunswick



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News