TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 7月28日 00時52分
Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir, at 43, is one of the youngest #women to lead a European country. Iceland may be small, with just 350,000 people, but it’s home to big ideas that are turning the heads of international policymakers, writes Ciara Nugent. #Iceland is already ranked the best country in which to be a woman by the World Economic Forum, and @katrinjakobsd’s government is rolling out the world’s toughest equal-pay legislation. One of the only government heads from an environmentalist party, Jakobsdóttir wants to make the country a leader in climate action too, with an ambitious plan to make Iceland carbon neutral by 2040, 10 years before the target set for Iceland’s neighbors in the E.U. “It can be an advantage to be small,” she tells TIME. “You can do things bigger and faster. You can actually change everything in a very short time.” Read our full interview at the link in bio. Photograph by @oliviaharris_shoots for TIME
[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)
b107n83
@brannonangela you're wrong and you're a cuck. "We show that a gender earnings gap can exist even in a controlled environment where work
tasks are similar, wages are identical, and tenure dictates promotions. The gap of $0.89 in our
setting, which is 60% of the earnings gap across the United States, can be explained entirely
by the fact that, while having the same choice sets in the workplace, women and men make
different choices. Women use the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) to take more unpaid time
off than men and they work fewer overtime hours at 1.5 times the wage rate. At the root of these
different choices is the fact that women value time and flexibility more than men. Men and
women choose to work similar hours of overtime when it is scheduled a quarter in advance,
but men work nearly twice as many overtime hours than women when they are scheduled the
day before. Using W-4 filings to ascertain marital status and the presence of dependents, we
show that women with dependents – especially single women – value time away from work
more than men with dependents.
When selecting their work schedule for the following quarter, women try to avoid incon-
venient days, like weekends, and shifts, like split-shifts, more than men. Prioritizing schedule-
related amenities over route quality-related amenities, women select routes with higher prob-
abilities of assaults and collisions in order to avoid unfavorable schedules. When faced with
having to work an unfavorable schedule, like a weekend, holiday, or split shift, women take
more unpaid time off. Men also take more unpaid time off in those circumstances, but they
more than make up for lost earnings with overtime. While constrained schedules lead to lower
earnings for women, they result in higher earnings for men." This is a Harvard (a very liberal college) study from just last year. Doesn't say women get paid less, it states what any normal, self thinking human would think when told women are getting paid less to do the same job a man is. No company is going to risk losing millions in a law suit due to discrimination.
yunitakusumaward
islandia yg kmaren ada kasus penembakan ya???? ngak kecil selandia baru sangat indah...byk sesuatu yg alami?tanaman dll.kalau bisa indonesia juga mau kadi negara yg bebas terorisme!!! aku benci teroris!...sebenarnya simple apa yg mampu dihasilkan tanah yg kau pijak maka kau bisa memanfaatkan nya dari hal yg sekecil2nya...semisal..udara dan musim...dari situ saja pasti ada perbedaan apa yg kita makan,baju, jg proses pengolahan makanan dan kebiasaan hanya gara2 iklim dan musim..semua butuh proses jagung kan ngak begitu aja jadi corn flakes..kl mau instan ngikut aja dgn negara adikuasa jadikan negara kita negara dia?....mesir negara tandus bahkan kita ngak bisa nanam apapun disana tapi mereka bisa membangun negara yg begitu megah dan dikagumi oleh seluruh manusia dimuka bumi.dari pemahaman sederhana jika kita hendak memimpin suatu negara hendaknya kita mampu membuat suatu yg kecil pasti akan menjadi besar yg nantinya bisa menyejahterakan masyarakat
ceciliestrandmose
@ospgunnars Then @time should have written “youngest ever” plus - if they are discounting our prime minister due to our queen and her leadership (only on paper) then she must be the equivalent to your president. Meaning out prime minister, Mette, is the equivalent to your prime minister, Katrín.
ospgunnars
@ammsondergaard someone else mentioned Denmark's PM... but Katrìn has been serving for some time, so maybe they're talking about youngest at the time of election OR they are not calling Denmark's PM the "female leader of the country" as Denmark has a Queen.
time
Correction: The original version of this story misstated the politician who is Europe’s youngest female leader. Denmark’s 41-year-old Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen is Europe’s youngest female leader, not Katrín Jakobsdóttir.
ospgunnars
@ceciliestrandmose Katrín has been prime minister for two years, so she may have been younger when elected. Time may also be discounting your PM since you have a Queen that technically is the leader if only in name.
>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する