Revolutions are often exciting. They stir change, mobilize ideas, and are often at the cutting edge of excitement. Yet what happens after revolutions is often the work that matters. The problem is that it’s hard work. The cameras are off, the story has grown cold, but this is where the work gets done that can truly change the world.
The women's movement is such an example. While dramatic changes once took place, arguably, the hard work since has not been quite enough
While the opportunities for elite women to “lean in,” have never been stronger, American women overall fare worse today than men on virtually every major dimension of social status, financial well-being, and physical safety.
Sexual violence is still condoned, and reproductive rights are by no means secure. Women assume disproportionate burdens in the home and pay a heavy price in the workplace.
Yet these issues are not political priorities. Nor is there a consensus that it’s even a problem. This is the story that Stanford Law Professor Deborah Rhode tells in What Women Want: An Agenda for the Women's Movement.
My conversation with Deborah L. Rhode: