The
Best-Kept Secret
Price: $21.95
Subtitle: Women Corporate Lobbyists,
Policy, and Power in the United States
Author: Denise Benoit
Subject: Women's Studies / Sociology
Paper ISBN 0-8135-4066-6
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-4065-8
Pages: 160 pages
Publication Date: August 2007
Praise for The Best-Kept Secret
"This in-depth analysis of corporate lobbyists offers
evocative insights into how powerful women manage their jobs, families,
and gender-in a formerly all-male world. Benoit's case study of the
all-women 'Tax Alliance' is worth the price of the book."-Patricia
Yancey Martin, author of Rape Work: Gender, Victims, and Emotions
in Organizations and Communities
"Just when we might think we have learned everything we
possibly could about corporate lobbying due to all the recent scandals
and exposs, we now have the pleasant surprise of finding out from this
highly original and fast moving book that corporations have yet another
important and previously invisible way to influence government, through
the growing number women lobbyists who serve as their eyes, ears, and
persuaders in some of the most important policy arenas in
Washington."-G. William Domhoff, author of Who Rules America? Power,
Politics, and Social Change
"The Best Kept Secret
[is] an inside-the-Beltway study of the highly paid professional women
who have become the managers, directors, and vice presidents of
corporate-government relocations departments housed inside corporations
and business trade associations. This is a book that deserves to be
read by those interested in the nature of work, gender, and
inequality."-American Journal of Sociology,
November 2008
Description:
From lobbyists such as Jack Abramoff, to corporate
executives, like Enron's Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling, recent
scandals dealing with politics and government have focused only on men
at the top. But do these high-profile men accurately represent the
gendered make up of corporate-government in the United States?
In this first in-depth look at the changing face of corporate
lobbying, Denise Benoit shows how women who have historically worked
mostly in policy areas relating to "women's issues" such as welfare,
family, and health have become increasingly influential as corporate
lobbyists, specializing in what used to be considered "masculine"
policy, such as taxes and defense. Benoit finds that this new crop of
female lobbyists mobilize both masculinity and femininity in ways that
create and maintain trusting, open, and strong relations with those in
government, and at the same time help corporations to save and earn
billions of dollars.
While the media focuses on the dubious behaviors of men at
the top of business and government, this book shows that female
corporate lobbyists are indeed one of the best kept secrets in
Washington.
About the Author:
Denise Benoit is an associate professor of
sociology at the State University of New York, Geneseo.
Receive
special offers and book notices by email. Sign up for RU READING?
Price: $21.95
|