The Most Powerful Women in Banking
It’s tough enough to grapple with sexual harassment in the workplace. It’s more complex when clients are involved.
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JPMorgan Chase’s Thasunda Duckett is living her ancestors’ wildest dreams; Morgan Stanley could take a lesson from Citi on reining in rainmakers; and Jelena McWilliams faces tough choices at the FDIC. Plus, babysitting gets approved as a new type of campaign expense.
May 14 -
Democratic Senator Kamala Harris on Thursday upped the pressure on the U.S. central bank to make its leadership more diverse, introducing legislation to compel the Federal Reserve's 12 regional banks to interview at least one woman and one minority candidate when they search for a new chief.
May 10 -
Manuela Veloso, head of the machine learning department at Carnegie Mellon University, will join the bank in July.
May 9 -
Thasunda Brown Duckett discussed her journey to becoming CEO of consumer banking at JPMorgan Chase, a career path that, she noted, wasn't available to African-American executives only a generation ago.
May 9 -
Banks need to respond swiftly to allegations of sexual harassment and other misdeeds, even those involving their top performers.
May 9The New School
The latest news and perspective on women in the industry | The Most Powerful Women in Banking program convenes and empowers the community of female executives in financial services.