Labor Pains In August 1975, Working Women United began releasing a newsletter, titled
Labor Pains. The articles in the newsletter covered women's issues in the workplace, including perspectives from a variety of experiences. The stories came from women of all ages, all backgrounds, and of all professions. The newsletter showed women that they were not alone in their struggles and that these struggles were valid. Among these stories was Carmita Woods' encounter with sexual harassment and a summary of the May 4th 1975 Speak Out protest. Additionally, these articles offered women guidance in their fight back against sexual assault and sexual harassment in the workplace. The newsletter, along with other advocacy efforts of WWU, helped the organization gain national media attention. The efforts of Working Women United helped spread sexual assault awareness and resources to citizens all across the country. During the summer of 1975 through the middle of 1976, WWU appeared in the
New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and the
Chicago Tribune. Working Women United continued to publish issues of Labor Pains until early 1976. Later that year Working Women United disband and was replaced by Working Women Institute (WWUI).
Working Women Institute (WWI) Theory and Critics of Working Women Institute In the late 1970s there was much discussion of the oppressive structures behind the sexual harassments of Women in the workplace, all rooted in
feminist theory. Many feminist theorists often related sexual harassments to rape in that sexual harassment like rape is about power and not sex. For instance, WWI has stated understanding sexual harassments in the workplace to be economic rape and that inequality between the sexes is the basic cause of sexual harassments. WWI strongly supported legal solutions to sexual harassments while other organizations such as the
Alliance Against Sexual Coercion (AASC), were more wary of the legal system. Members of WWI have also been criticized for their lack of
intersectionality and sole focus on the patriarchy. In 1978,
Lin Farley wrote Sexual Shakedown: The Sexual Harassment of Women on the Job, in which she stated patriarchy to be the root of sexual harassment. An organizer from the AASC,
Freada Klein, was one of Farley's biggest critic. Klein and AASC, argue that sexual harassment is the product of intersectional oppression. Klein argues that Farley's analysis is too simplistic and overlooks the role capitalism, race, and class play in sexual harassment. Farley responds to Klein in
Aegis magazine, affirming her argument that patriarchy is the root of sexual harassments arguing that in capitalism women can now compete with men in a free labor market but not possible if male trade unions segregate training and job opportunities, making it rooted in patriarchy. All in all, Freada Klein acknowledged Lin Farley's ground breaking work and its role in discussion of sexual harassments.
Brief Banks The WWU created brief banks in order to file and organize previous sexual assault cases. Through the establishment of brief banks, WWI centralized access to a comprehensive body of legal knowledge on sexual harassment. WWI positioned itself as the leading authority on this subject, thus catapulting them into the public eye.
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