Entries from September 1, 2008 - September 30, 2008

Tuesday
Sep302008

Why Part-Time Is Big Time

 

Lego Office

(Image by Gerard Bierens, CC by-nc-nd)

Cynthia Thomas Calvert over at the Project for Attorney Retention (PAR) blog has a response to my recent Dicta column (Rare Birds). She explains why men and part-time schedules are an important indicator:

 


Why the big emphasis on the number of male part-time lawyers? Two reasons: first, PAR has identified the number of males working part-time as a key indicator of the health of a firm's part-time program. If males at your firm are afraid to reduce their hours, then your firm's part-time program is too stigmatized to be an effective recruiting and retention tool for any lawyers. Second, it is very important for males to be able to have work/life balance, as PAR has been advising for years through its principle of "universal application" for part-time programs. It is important for their mental health, for their families' lives, and for eventual gender equality.


 

On the last point, please see Monica Bay, Bob Abrogi, Chere Estrin, and this August U.S. Census report (PDF) on the 51% across-the-board gender pay gap in the legal profession. I don't know how you address this until the male part-time stigma goes away and work-life balance begins to mean the same thing regardless of gender. (E.g., having a ready book stash under your desk to occupy little ones during a quick morning blog post...)

Cynthia links to PAR's chart tracking (among other things) the number of part-time men and women at various firms, which is interesting to scroll through. There are zero to a small percentage of part-time men at most firms, though at Alston and Fullbright for example it's a dead heat, and at Arent Fox part-time men outnumber women. As Cynthia points out, "perhaps not all [of these part-time men] are dads, and perhaps some are working part-time as they near retirement, but their numbers both show and contribute to a change in law firm culture." She says PAR is "in the midst of a study of part-time partners, and the part-time dad partners are lining up to be interviewed," so we can look forward to that. In the meantime, thanks to all the male lawyers who've emailed to say they're looking forward to the de-stigmatization of part-time work for men, and/or that they've abandoned BigLaw to chart their own, more participatory course.

Friday
Sep052008

Stumpy The Brave


stumpy_version1 from colorwars on Vimeo.

Loved this story by Ze Frank with illustrations from his listeners/readers. His next project is an interactive book for children, and he could use your kids' help if you and they are so inclined.

Wednesday
Sep032008

Typical Female Mac Users Steal Victor's Show

Thanks to Victor Cajaio for letting the lunatics run the asylum on this week's Typical Mac User Podcast. I chimed in with a spot about EULAs and terms of service, and Victor rounded up an interesting an eclectic lot of women to contribute.

Typical Mac User Podcast

Tuesday
Sep022008

Rare Birds

My September Dicta column is up: Rare Birds. In addition to all the great input I received from readers here, my inspirations included:

 


  • Women now have choices. They can be married, not married, have a job, not have a job, be married with children, unmarried with children. Men have the same choices we've always had: work or prison. ~Tim Allen

  • If it can't be fixed by duct tape or WD-40, it's a female problem. ~Jason Love

  • Man who drive like hell, bound to get there. ~pseudo-Confucian proverb

 

You can access my earlier Dicta columns, On Life Support, and Death by Committee, at those links.

 

American Lawyer