Publication | Open Access
The Gender Trap: Flexible Work in Corporate Legal Practice
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2007
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Business LawGender JusticeGender TrapGender StudiesFlexible WorkSociologyWomen LawyersFeminist PerspectiveGender JurisprudenceLawGender EqualityFlexible Work ArrangementGender DivideFeminist TheoryWorkplace StudySocial SciencesSocial Justice
Despite the fact that women comprise well over 50 per cent of law graduates in many parts of the world, women lawyers continue to be clustered disproportionately in the lower echelons of the profession. This paper considers the role of flexible work as a gender equity strategy and is illuminated by interviews with lawyers in elite corporate firms in Australia. It is argued that far from being a panacea, flexible work is being invoked to confine women to subordinate roles and to restrict access to partnerships. Not only is there a residual suspicion of the feminine in positions of authority and resistance to the idea of bodily absence from the workplace, but also the contemporary market discourse has erased a commitment to social justice and equality.