Published by Basic Books, 1996, hardcover, index, 288 pages, condition: as new.
The official future says that women are moving toward equality with men. If not in our lifetime, we say, then in our children's.Think again.If the rate of change during the last twenty years holds, it would be 2270 before women and men were equally likely to be top managers of major corporations.In The Futures of Women, Pamela McCorduck and Nancy Ramsey explore four dramatically different alternatives for the coming years. Using a powerful new way of understanding trends scenario planning the authors paint these vivid landscapes: Backlash, A Golden Age of Equality, Two Steps Forward, Two Steps Back, and Separate and Doing Fine, Thanks. Each scenario has its own inner logic, firmly grounded in today's events, today's demographic and social trends, and in tomorrow's technological promises, but each one derives from a different combination of the political, social, and economic conditions that could prevail over the next twenty years. The authors' report from the recent UN Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing further supports their scenarios.The book began as a project for the Global Business Network, a unique consulting firm whose scenario planning methods have helped governments, policymakers, and business leaders create effective strategies for the future. Decisions take on new meaning when we can live for awhile in the world that would result from a course of action we're now considering.Imagine a world where as many women as men are elected to the U.S. Congress. Or, a world where fear for personal safety causes women to don the Muslim chador on Western streets. Or, imagine a national economic policy influenced by giant pension funds whose managers and clients are mainly women. Or, a world where exclusive resorts cater to the sexual needs of busy women executives.Are any of these worlds in our future? Any one of them could be. Only by understanding how we could move from here to there how the choices we make today could actually play out can we hope to influence which future comes to pass.The official future won't happen, but one of these four scenarios could. The compelling stories of women living in these futures give women today the reasons and the inspiration to shape their own.
"Imagining the future is the first step toward realizing or avoiding it, say Pamela McCorduck and Nancy Ramsey. The duo use some science and a lot of art to project what women's lives might be like two decades hence. They paint four brave new worlds by mixing different driving forces--group vs. individual rights; sluggish vs. strong economic growth--with present-day events and trends. One scenario is a golden age of equality and opportunity. Another postulates nightmarish backlash. In a future Germany, for example, it is said that "The Berlin Wall fell on women" because state-supported child care, abortion rights, and employment were swept away after unification and economic backpedaling pushed women to the bottom of the job market. The third vision has international women's organizations working too hard to retain earlier gains to move forward. In the last hypothetical situation, women advance their lot through alliances with other women, separate from men and governments. McCorduck and Ramsey freely admit that the complex chaos of societies and wild cards such as biological terrorism make predictions simplistic, but as we strain toward the future, their rich, imaginative book illuminates the present."