Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Cheryl L. Wade is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Cheryl L. Wade.


Archive | 2009

Workplace racial discrimination and the professionals at the center of corporate hierarchies

Cheryl L. Wade

Why do so many African Americans get stuck near the bottom or at the middle of the corporate ladder? Why do so many continue to complain about discriminatory pay and promotion decisions many decades after the enactment of anti-discrimination laws? Law and economics commentators who have written about the issue of employment discrimination have failed to address the complexity of the problem of implicit bias and the effects of the frequently inaccurate heuristics used by some white workers when making judgments about their black colleagues. Economic theory without context is useless. But with context, law and economic analysis can help us understand and address specific problems like workplace discrimination that persist within corporate cultures because of an overestimation of the cost of anti-discrimination efforts and an underestimation of the gravity and likelihood of workplace discrimination. In this chapter, I explore the economic and socioeconomic reality of African American low and mid-level corporate managers in order to capture a more complete picture of the costs of discrimination in the corporate workplace. I also explore the heuristic assumptions that are made about African American professionals and the effects those assumptions have on the black community. Finally, to understand the gravity of the harm to individuals, their families and the communities to which they belong, narratives about the economic and psychological harm caused by discrimination are essential. I offer the narratives of six middle managers and low-level professionals who faced discrimination in the corporate workplace to provide an important context about discriminations real costs.


Washington and Lee Law Review | 2004

We Are an Equal Opportunity Employer: Diversity Doublespeak

Cheryl L. Wade


Maryland Law Review | 2006

Transforming Discriminatory Corporate Cultures: This is Not Just Women's Work

Cheryl L. Wade


St. John’s Law Review | 2012

Corporate Governance Failures and the Managerial Duty of Care

Cheryl L. Wade


Loyola University of Chicago Law Journal | 2008

Sarbanes-Oxley Five Years Later: Will Criticism of SOX Undermine Its Benefits?

Cheryl L. Wade


Western New England law review | 2010

AFRICAN-AMERICAN ENTREPRENEURS: INTEGRATION, EDUCATION, AND EXCLUSION

Cheryl L. Wade


Archive | 2006

What Independent Directors Should Expect from Inside Directors: Smith V. Van Gorkom as a Guide to Intra-Firm Governance

Cheryl L. Wade


Washington University Law Review | 2015

Toward a Critical Corporate Law Pedagogy and Scholarship

andré douglas pond cummings; Steven A. Ramirez; Cheryl L. Wade


St. John’s Law Review | 2012

Attempting to Discuss Race in Business and Corporate Law Courses and Seminars

Cheryl L. Wade


Loyola University of Chicago Law Journal | 1994

The Integration of Securities Offerings: A Proposed Formula That Fosters the Policies of Securities Regulation

Cheryl L. Wade

Collaboration


Dive into the Cheryl L. Wade's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge