Legal

Law firms urged to 'focus on what really works' to tackle gender inequality



Law firms have been urged to focus on what actually works when it comes to tackling gender inequality, after a survey found most female legal professionals believe measures adopted by their organisations to be ineffective.

According to a survey from the Next 100 Years project, just 45% of 204 respondents thought measures to remove career barriers for women at their organisation were effective.

Nearly all firms appear to allow remote or hybrid working. Most allow part-time working. Just under half of firms offer mentoring and coaching support. Less than half offer women’s networks, flexitime and additional support for maternity returners. Only 4% offer financial support for childcare.

An overwhelming majority of respondents thought remote/hybrid and part-time working were effective. Only 35% thought external diversity pledges worked.

A fifth of respondents did not believe work was allocated fairly between men and women. Over a third believed working from home could be detrimental to getting the best work, while more than half thought working part-time would have the same negative impact.

Most respondents thought mentoring and coaching, visible role models, women networking events and sector-specific representative groups for women could help women to progress their careers.

Solicitor Dana Denis-Smith, founder of Next 100 Years, said: ‘With organisations adopting a wide range of new initiatives, from gender-blind work allocation to fertility services and menopause support, it’s time to take a step back and focus on what women are telling us really works.’



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