Women on the List
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What do Queen Elizabeth II, J.K. Rowling and Oprah Winfrey have in common?
Answer: They're all on Forbes magazine's July 28 list of The World's 100 Most Powerful Women.
The women on Forbes "power rankings" are chosen according to three elements. There's the resume (a prime minister trumps a senator). There's the size of the economic sphere over which a leader held sway (large national treasuries and corporate coffers count for more than smaller ones). And then there are the blips on the media radar, which Factiva, a Dow Jones company, tallied for Forbes.
Like all lists--top 100 movies, top 100 books, top 100 cities--this has an inherent taxonomic interest. After all, we all want to know who's who and what's what so it's instructive to know that Forbes--aided by Catalyst, the women's business research outfit, Laura Liswood, secretary general of the Council of Women World Leaders, and Elizabeth Ryan of Worldwit, a women's business group--thinks Condoleezza Rice leads the pack of alpha females. And who knew that Susan Berresford, president of the Ford Foundation, would pop up in 93rd place?
The list also includes women who are partners of powerful men, such as Laura Bush (No. 46), Cherie Booth Blair (No. 62) and Queen Rania of Jordan (No. 80).
It's also interesting--in the ghoulish way of reality TV elimination shows--to see who's disappeared since Forbes compiled the list for the first time in 2004. Gone now is Megawati Sukarnoputri, the former president of Indonesia, who lost her re-election contest in September 2004. Carleton (Carly) Fiorina, forced to resign as the head of Hewlett-Packard this past February, is also off the list.
Assessing Power the Old-Fashioned Way
But the odd thing about a list like this, which assesses power the old fashioned way--by economic clout and media attention--is that it mainly serves to show how few women are actually at the pinnacles of power.
To test this theory, just cast your eye over the top 10:
How many of these women ring loud bells of recognition? Yes, I personally know quite a lot about Condi Rice, Oprah and Melinda Gates. But Wu Yi? Brenda Barnes? It's not that they're not important people--they certainly are--it's just that the media have not made them household names.
Condoleezza Rice, U.S. Secretary of State
Wu Yi, vice premier and minister of health, China
Yulia Tymoshenko, prime minister, *Ukraine
Gloria Arroyo, president, the Philippines
Margaret Whitman, CEO, eBay
Anne Mulcahy, CEO, Xerox
Sallie Krawcheck, CFO, Citigroup
Brenda Barnes, CEO, Sara Lee
Oprah Winfrey, chair, Harpo
Melinda Gates, co-founder, The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Sheila Gibbons is editor of Media Report to Women, a quarterly news journal of news, research and commentary about women and media.
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