Thanks to the strong women in Turkey's economy...
The situation of women in Turkey as revealed in the World Economic Forumâs Global Gender Gap report issued every year is grave. In the 2014 report, Turkey was in 125th place among 142 countries.
Women in Turkey cannot be seen in business life and in politics; they are also behind in education compared to men. There is another aspect that is not in the report: Violence against women.
Sabancı University issued a report the other day, titled âBusiness Against Domestic Violence.â One of its findings was that 75 percent of college graduates, white collar female workers, have at least once in their lives been subject to one instance of violence.
Sabancı University conducted for the first time in Turkey this domestic violence survey in the business world. The Chairperson of the Board of Trustees of Sabancı University is Güler Sabancı, the head of Sabancı Holding. The Sabancı Foundation, which is also headed by Güler Sabancı, has been conducting projects in various cities in Anatolia empowering women.
Another member of the Sabancı family, the head of Akbank, Suzan Sabancı, is trying to increase the number of women on Sabancı executive boards. Suzan Sabancı has taken over the position of the head of the Advisory Board of the inter-company mentoring program regarding women on executive boards.
According to Suzan Sabancı, one of the issues that Turkey should focus on in 2015 is increasing the number of women in executive boards. In Spencer Stuartâs âTurkey Board Index,â the rate of women in executive committees in Turkey is only 9 percent.
While the European Union is planning to introduce a quota in its member countries, Muslim-majority Malaysia has already introduced a 30 percent quota for new...
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