Breaking the Rainbow Ceiling: How LGBTQ+ people can thrive and succeed at work
Autor Layla McCayen Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 mai 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781399410762
ISBN-10: 1399410768
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 153 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Business
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1399410768
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 153 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Business
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Interviews with, or case studies featuring, high-profile LGBTQ+ leaders and CEOs from around the world (USA, UK, India, Singapore and Australia) - including the UK's diplomatic corps, Accenture, AstraZeneca, Brooks Brothers, the US military, Meta, Credit Suisse and Dow.
Notă biografică
Layla McCay is Director of Policy at the NHS Confederation and Executive Lead of the national Health and Care LGBTQ+ Leaders Network. A psychiatrist and founder of the Centre for Urban Design and Mental Health, her co-authored book, Restorative Cities: Urban Design for Mental Health and Wellbeing, was a finalist for the Great Places Book Award. Layla McCay has been recognized on the Outstanding 100 LGBTQ+ Executives Role Model List 2023 as a global role model driving LGBTQ+ inclusion in business. She lives with her wife in London.
Recenzii
Layla is right that the challenges to opportunity exist disproportionately across minority communities - I am thrilled that she's not only highlighting these disparities for the LGBTQ+ community but is providing insights and solutions to overcome these challenges.
This much-needed and engaging book will resonate with LGBTQ+ people on every step of the career ladder and leave everyone who reads it with a little extra knowledge, insight, inspiration and a sense of hope.
As CEO of the premier non-profit organization working exclusively on LGBTQ+ workplace equity, inclusion, and belonging, it is such a pleasure to find a book so full of personal insights, research and practical actions on these topics. This book makes it clear how the rainbow ceiling was built, and how to break it down, with anecdotes from people all over the world that make it funny, sad, surprising, and real. Required reading for LGBTQ+ people pursuing their careers as well as for anyone seeking to build a more inclusive workplace.
Employers can ignore the rainbow ceiling or deny its existence altogether as self-identification and representation estimates remain rare. Consequently, LGBTQ+ people are often not part of the decisions that shape their lives. Through fascinating interviews with business, diplomatic, and administrative senior professionals, Layla McCay has pinpointed the subtle mechanisms of exclusion behind this phenomenon and how to mitigate them. Her book honours the experience of a generation of resilient and exemplary LGBTQ+ leaders who often had to overcome significant hurdles and do twice the work for half the recognition. But perhaps more importantly, it provides a guide to overcoming these obstacles for LGBTQ+ people and their employers today. Breaking the rainbow ceiling is crucial in filling the representation gap - Layla McCay's book brings us one step closer to this goal.
Coming out is often a challenging and frightening experience. In some jurisdictions, it is still illegal to be openly LGBTQ and in other places, despite no legal restrictions, coming out can expose individuals to harassment, bullying and violence. Closer to home, although less pronounced and largely less dangerous, discrimination and prejudice is still with us. For many, being openly LGBTQ in the workplace still presents a challenge. The rainbow ceiling loomed large in my professional career and was one of the reasons I remained in the closet for so long. I was outed by a tabloid newspaper in 2007, resigned as CEO of BP, and began to build a new life in the world I had feared since my youth. After the initial pain, I found it to be life-giving. Coming out enabled me to think bigger and aim higher.Layla McCay's Breaking the Rainbow Ceiling picks up where I left off. Much has changed for the better in the decade since I told my own story in The Glass Closet, but we are still not where we should be. This book is essential reading for those who are building up the courage to bring their authentic self into the workplace, for those who have already taken that leap, and for those who stand ready to support them. No one should be held back on the grounds of their sexual orientation or imprisoned by their own fear. This book is a reminder that the rainbow ceiling can and will be broken.
A brilliantly researched book packed full of insight, advice and inspiration for those who want to be able to live, work and succeed as their authentic and fabulous LGBTQ+ selves.
At last we have a view from the top from LGBTQ+ leaders in business and other sectors. Layla McCay convincingly shows that these pioneers did not have an easy path. But even as the stakes grew higher on the way up, this impressive group of leaders managed to break through the rainbow ceiling. LGBTQ+ readers of this fascinating book will have an easier time on their own journeys thanks to the wonderful advice that McCay has distilled from her research.
Layla McCay has deftly brought together clear facts and compelling stories to shine a light on the realities of being LGBTQ+ in today's world. This compulsively readable work celebrates the progress that has been made and illuminates the challenges that still lie ahead. It is an important prompt for questions we all must ask ourselves - whether gay or straight - about our shared commitment to busting through the rainbow ceiling on the way to a more inclusive and compassionate society.
Enough of talking about inequity! It's time to start doing, to help create change, and in this brilliant, and useful book, Layla McCay gives us a manual of how to create inclusion infrastructures for LGBTQ+ people to thrive and rise to the top. It is time for us, along with help from our allies to break that rainbow ceiling, and to "lift as we climb". Layla's interviewees come from different professions and from all over the world, and they offer a wealth of perspectives that support her extraordinary data-driven research. For instance, I was fascinated to read about the barriers to LGBTQ+ progression that Layla outlined, like "unmooring", or simply the fact that so many queer leaders may have been lost due to the AIDS pandemic! I teared up when I read the "advice to my younger self" section and I think that you will too.
Profound research, inspiring stories, a clear message: Why are LGBTQ+ people underrepresented at the most senior levels in global workplaces? What can be done to change this - by employers, lawmakers, managers, the queer workforce? And why is this so important - for all of us? Layla McCay has written a very important book, essential for every leader at all levels.
An important look at ways to combat the impacts of prejudice in the workplace so that everyone can thrive at work.
McCay is spot on. In this new era for LGBTQ+ equality, it's imperative that we continue to break down the structural barriers to LGBTQ+ equality. In our global advocacy work - from developing emerging LGBTQ+ talent to empowering senior LGBTQ+ leaders - Out Leadership has seen time and again that the lift-as-you-climb approach is our best hammer to break the rainbow ceiling.
In the decade since Lord Browne published The Glass Closet it's disheartening to see LGBTQ+ folks on both sides of the Atlantic enjoy fewer protections than they did 10 years ago and still encounter inequalities in the hiring process and in the workplace. Layla's research is therefore both important and timely: more than ever we're relying on corporations to step into issues of social justice, and today's managers need more guidance than ever before. My hope is that this book will help more LGBTQ+ folks rise to positions of leadership, and in turn inspire the next generation.
A powerful, inspiring and critically important read for HR professionals and for LGBTQ+ people developing their careers.
This much-needed and engaging book will resonate with LGBTQ+ people on every step of the career ladder and leave everyone who reads it with a little extra knowledge, insight, inspiration and a sense of hope.
As CEO of the premier non-profit organization working exclusively on LGBTQ+ workplace equity, inclusion, and belonging, it is such a pleasure to find a book so full of personal insights, research and practical actions on these topics. This book makes it clear how the rainbow ceiling was built, and how to break it down, with anecdotes from people all over the world that make it funny, sad, surprising, and real. Required reading for LGBTQ+ people pursuing their careers as well as for anyone seeking to build a more inclusive workplace.
Employers can ignore the rainbow ceiling or deny its existence altogether as self-identification and representation estimates remain rare. Consequently, LGBTQ+ people are often not part of the decisions that shape their lives. Through fascinating interviews with business, diplomatic, and administrative senior professionals, Layla McCay has pinpointed the subtle mechanisms of exclusion behind this phenomenon and how to mitigate them. Her book honours the experience of a generation of resilient and exemplary LGBTQ+ leaders who often had to overcome significant hurdles and do twice the work for half the recognition. But perhaps more importantly, it provides a guide to overcoming these obstacles for LGBTQ+ people and their employers today. Breaking the rainbow ceiling is crucial in filling the representation gap - Layla McCay's book brings us one step closer to this goal.
Coming out is often a challenging and frightening experience. In some jurisdictions, it is still illegal to be openly LGBTQ and in other places, despite no legal restrictions, coming out can expose individuals to harassment, bullying and violence. Closer to home, although less pronounced and largely less dangerous, discrimination and prejudice is still with us. For many, being openly LGBTQ in the workplace still presents a challenge. The rainbow ceiling loomed large in my professional career and was one of the reasons I remained in the closet for so long. I was outed by a tabloid newspaper in 2007, resigned as CEO of BP, and began to build a new life in the world I had feared since my youth. After the initial pain, I found it to be life-giving. Coming out enabled me to think bigger and aim higher.Layla McCay's Breaking the Rainbow Ceiling picks up where I left off. Much has changed for the better in the decade since I told my own story in The Glass Closet, but we are still not where we should be. This book is essential reading for those who are building up the courage to bring their authentic self into the workplace, for those who have already taken that leap, and for those who stand ready to support them. No one should be held back on the grounds of their sexual orientation or imprisoned by their own fear. This book is a reminder that the rainbow ceiling can and will be broken.
A brilliantly researched book packed full of insight, advice and inspiration for those who want to be able to live, work and succeed as their authentic and fabulous LGBTQ+ selves.
At last we have a view from the top from LGBTQ+ leaders in business and other sectors. Layla McCay convincingly shows that these pioneers did not have an easy path. But even as the stakes grew higher on the way up, this impressive group of leaders managed to break through the rainbow ceiling. LGBTQ+ readers of this fascinating book will have an easier time on their own journeys thanks to the wonderful advice that McCay has distilled from her research.
Layla McCay has deftly brought together clear facts and compelling stories to shine a light on the realities of being LGBTQ+ in today's world. This compulsively readable work celebrates the progress that has been made and illuminates the challenges that still lie ahead. It is an important prompt for questions we all must ask ourselves - whether gay or straight - about our shared commitment to busting through the rainbow ceiling on the way to a more inclusive and compassionate society.
Enough of talking about inequity! It's time to start doing, to help create change, and in this brilliant, and useful book, Layla McCay gives us a manual of how to create inclusion infrastructures for LGBTQ+ people to thrive and rise to the top. It is time for us, along with help from our allies to break that rainbow ceiling, and to "lift as we climb". Layla's interviewees come from different professions and from all over the world, and they offer a wealth of perspectives that support her extraordinary data-driven research. For instance, I was fascinated to read about the barriers to LGBTQ+ progression that Layla outlined, like "unmooring", or simply the fact that so many queer leaders may have been lost due to the AIDS pandemic! I teared up when I read the "advice to my younger self" section and I think that you will too.
Profound research, inspiring stories, a clear message: Why are LGBTQ+ people underrepresented at the most senior levels in global workplaces? What can be done to change this - by employers, lawmakers, managers, the queer workforce? And why is this so important - for all of us? Layla McCay has written a very important book, essential for every leader at all levels.
An important look at ways to combat the impacts of prejudice in the workplace so that everyone can thrive at work.
McCay is spot on. In this new era for LGBTQ+ equality, it's imperative that we continue to break down the structural barriers to LGBTQ+ equality. In our global advocacy work - from developing emerging LGBTQ+ talent to empowering senior LGBTQ+ leaders - Out Leadership has seen time and again that the lift-as-you-climb approach is our best hammer to break the rainbow ceiling.
In the decade since Lord Browne published The Glass Closet it's disheartening to see LGBTQ+ folks on both sides of the Atlantic enjoy fewer protections than they did 10 years ago and still encounter inequalities in the hiring process and in the workplace. Layla's research is therefore both important and timely: more than ever we're relying on corporations to step into issues of social justice, and today's managers need more guidance than ever before. My hope is that this book will help more LGBTQ+ folks rise to positions of leadership, and in turn inspire the next generation.
A powerful, inspiring and critically important read for HR professionals and for LGBTQ+ people developing their careers.