Document Type
Article
Abstract
Over the past few years, California became the setting for shocking tales of sex inequality and abuse in Hollywood and Silicon Valley. Decades after women achieved educational parity. men still run the corporate world. In response to these stories exposed by the #MeToo movement, California joined the transnational corporate board quota movement by converting its voluntary quota into a hard one. Will California's first mover status overcome constitutional objections and inspire other jurisdictions to act. Or is just Utopian dreaming, California-style? This Essay argues that despite its many flaws, the quota may succeed in curbing male over-representation on corporate boards. After contextualizes the quota within the transnational corporate board quota movement, it rejects the U.S. reaction that emphasizes the private sector's dominion over equality remedies. Despite the U.S. resistance to quotas, comparative experience reveals both that the private sector manages how quota implementation occurs. The Essay concludes that some public intervention--in concert with private efforts--remains necessary
Recommended Citation
Darren Rosenblum, California Dreaming?, 99 B.U. L. Rev. 1435 (2019), https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/lawfaculty/1131/
Included in
Business Organizations Law Commons, Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, Law and Gender Commons