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Taking Women's Issues On the Road
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| Reporting on the
Initiative: a San Francisco audience heard Laney
Funderburk '60, director of alumni affairs, above,
present WICS panel; Funderburk, below, with guests at
reception |
| Photos:
Jon Gardiner |
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In May 2002, then-president Nannerl O. Keohane launched the Women's
Initiative to document the personal experiences and needs of
women at Duke and to develop strategies to address the challenges
women face as students, faculty members, employees, and alumnae.
After the Women's Initiative Steering Committee (WISC) delivered
its report last fall, Michele Miller Sales '78, J.D. '81, then-president
of the Duke Alumni Association (DAA), urged officials to share
it with the Duke community, particularly in the cities where
focus groups of alumni had provided information.
With the backing of the DAA and in partnership with Duke's Council
on Women's Studies, WISC took its message on the road. Venues were
chosen, invitations were mailed, and a panel of speakers from the
steering committee was formed. At receptions in New York, Washington,
Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and the Triangle,
the committee reported on its findings, recommendations, and actions--from
stronger undergraduate-life programs to graduate-student program
enhancements, from changes in the faculty tenure system to improvement
in staff support, from educational opportunities to better child
care.
Keohane kicked off the first reception in New York in February
and spoke in March in Washington. Panel participants in the various
cities included Allison Haltom '72, vice president and university
secretary; Donna Lisker, director of the Women's Center at Duke;
Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs; and Ellen Medearis,
director of major and leadership gifts at the development office.
The seven-city tour attracted nearly 1,000 alumni, parents, and
friends of the university.
www.duke.edu/womens_initiative
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