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Prof. Anne-Marie Slaughter Ph.D.
- Homepage: http://www.princeton.edu/~slaughtr/
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Self Description
Third-Party Descriptions
June 2012: "Enter Ms. Slaughter’s article, posted Wednesday night, in which she described a life that looked like a feminist diorama from the outside (a mother and top policy adviser for Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton) but was accompanied by domestic meltdown (workweeks spent in a different state than her family, a rebellious teenage son to whom she had little time to attend). As she questioned whether her job in Washington was doable and at what cost..."
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/22/us/elite-women-put-a-new-spin-on-work-life-debate.html
Relationships
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Role Name Type Last Updated Employee/Freelancer/Contractor (past or present) Harvard University Organization Jun 24, 2012 Employee/Freelancer/Contractor (past or present) Princeton University Organization Jun 24, 2012 Organization Executive (past or present) State Department/Department of State (DOS) Organization Jun 24, 2012 Employee/Freelancer/Contractor (past or present) University of Chicago Organization Jun 24, 2012 Organization Head/Leader (past or present) Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs (WWS) Organization Jun 24, 2012 Advisor/Consultant to (past or present) Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton Person Jun 24, 2012
Articles and Resources
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Date Fairness.com Resource Read it at: Jun 21, 2012 Elite Women Put a New Spin on an Old Debate QUOTE: The article in The Atlantic, by Anne-Marie Slaughter, a Princeton professor who recently left a job at the State Department, added to a renewed feminist conversation that is bringing fresh twists to bear on longstanding concerns about status, opportunity and family. Unlike earlier iterations, it is being led not by agitators who are out of power, but by elite women at the top of their fields, like the comedian Tina Fey, the Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg and now Ms. Slaughter. In contrast to some earlier barrier-breakers from Gloria Steinem to Condoleezza Rice, these women have children, along with husbands who do as much child-rearing as they do, or more.
New York Times
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