Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Pay Up

The Future of Women and Work (and Why It's Different Than You Think)

ebook
0 of 0 copies available
Wait time: Not available
0 of 0 copies available
Wait time: Not available
INSTANT NATIONAL BESTSELLER

"Reshma Saujani...offers a daring new approach: it's not our job to do more, it's time for our workplaces to pay up." —Tarana Burke, founder of the "me too" movement

The founder of Girls Who Code and bestselling author of Brave, Not Perfect confronts the "big lie" of corporate feminism and presents a bold plan to address the burnout and inequity harming America's working women today.
We told women that to break glass ceilings and succeed in their careers, all they needed to do is dream big, raise their hands, and lean in. But data tells a different story. Historic numbers of women left their jobs in 2021, resulting in their lowest workforce participation since 1988. Women's unemployment rose to nearly fifteen percent, and globally women lost over $800 billion in wages. Fifty-one percent of women say that their mental health has declined, while anxiety and depression rates have skyrocketed.

In this urgent and rousing call to arms, Reshma Saujani dismantles the myth of "having it all" and lifts the burden we place on individual women to be primary caregivers, and to work around a system built for and by men. The time has come, she argues, for innovative corporate leadership, government intervention, and sweeping culture shift; it's time to Pay Up.

Through powerful data and personal narrative, Saujani shows that the cost of inaction—for families, for our nation's economy, and for women themselves—is too great to ignore. She lays out four key steps for creating lasting change: empower working women, educate corporate leaders, revise our narratives about what it means to be successful, and advocate for policy reform.

Both a direct call to action for business leaders and a pragmatic set of tools for women themselves, Pay Up offers a bold vision for change as America defines the future of work.
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2021

      In the pandemic's first year, women worldwide lost $800 billion in wages, with unemployment among them rising from 3.1 percent to nearly 15 percent. Mothers in particular have reported encroaching anxiety, with almost 70 percent experiencing health problems owing to pandemic-induced stress. Saujani found herself stressed, too--and angered by the ongoing absence of support for mothers. Here she follows up her New York Times best-selling Girls Who Code and Brave, Not Perfect to propose The Marshall Plan for Moms, arguing for structural changes like government payments and workplace and cultural rethinking to help working women. With a 150,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2022
      The founder of Girls Who Code calls for a "radical reinvention" of the American workplace in ways that would help mothers and other women. Saujani writes that when she wrote Brave, Not Perfect (2019), she "was still in the throes of promoting the feminist propaganda of having it all via leaning in." Her view changed during the pandemic--which exposed social and emotional fault lines in her life and others' and which forced 12 million women from the labor force--and here, she adjusts her course. Expanding an essay for The Hill that called for a "Marshall Plan for Moms," the author proposes a sweeping array of solutions in an uninspired book comprised of part rant, part self-help, and part "call to action" rooted in three "critical public policies": affordable child care, paid parental leave, and cash payments to parents. Many ideas appear on bulleted lists called a "Playbook for Employers" and "What Women Can Do," and while some are worthy, too many are overfamiliar, underdeveloped, or unimaginative. (Managers should "Lead by example," and women should "Get enough sleep," an idea that may seem ludicrously impractical to any mother of a 6-month-old.) The writing is merely serviceable, and many of Saujani's ideas are surprisingly conservative or tame. She never suggests, for example, that working mothers might benefit from joining a labor union or pushing for a higher minimum wage. Worse, while Saujani pays lip service to second-wave feminists' efforts, she slights them in subtle and seemingly ill-informed ways. For example, she writes that feminists "forgot" to work for "equality in the home via compensation for the unpaid labor we do." In fact, they fought for it on many fronts, including, among numerous other examples, the Wages for Housework campaign. Saujani mentions her important work with Girls Who Code only briefly; a more enlightening book would have more deeply explored what that experience taught her. A disappointing take on what America's working women need.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 21, 2022
      Girls Who Code founder Saujani (Brave, Not Perfect) calls for “a full-scale reenvisioning of how we as a society... define ‘work’ ” in this impassioned if familiar manifesto. She makes a case that women “need the system to change” and that equality won’t be found via hard work or through more “girlbosses.” Rather, it can only be the result of big changes in “workplaces, homelife, culture, and governmental support.” She calls for for flexible work, paid leave, and subsidized childcare, bringing political and professional experience to her argument as “the first Indian American woman to run for Congress in New York City.” But her claims about “women and work”narrow to focus on heterosexual mothers in traditional homes and jobs, the section that asks “How Did We Get Here?” is a Wikipedia-shallow dive into the history of women in the American workplace, and her “radical reinvention of the workplace” involves pretty standard policy updates regarding time-off boundaries and national paid leave. Even if the manifesto is not as revolutionary as it’s purported to be, progressive readers will nevertheless find it worthwhile as a forceful, focused, and cogent articulation of these goals. It’s a fine lay of the land, but there’s not quite enough to set this one apart.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading