Sexism in the City report finds a culture of misogyny persists
The House of Commons Treasury Committee’s Sexism in the City report found that sexism remains a widespread and significant problem and that barriers to women’s progress “remain stubbornly in place” in the City of London’s financial sector.
Little has changed over the last five years, with many firms continuing to regard diversity as a “tick box” exercise, says the report.
Read our review and commentary on the report.
Topics include the extent of misogyny, bullying, and sexual harassment, including rape, across the sector, as well as the “widespread misuse” of non-disclosure agreements (NDAs).
We also provide some insights on what firms can do to address these problems, including firm leaders taking responsibility for tackling these challenges and enforcing policies to eradicate them, as well as training, and other strategies such as offering equalized maternity and paternity leave packages and facilitating hybrid, flexible and remote working patterns.
Further Reading
Our thoughts on the American Airlines 401k suit, its context and wider implications.
Interview with Pierre Lenders, Head of ESG and Sustainability at CFM.
Join Danesmead ESG and hear Daniella speak at the Real Deals ESG Forum 2025. Details and registration link inside.
SFDR, CSRD, greenwashing, and more in the Danesmead ESG December 2024 newsletter.
A proposal for the future of SFDR including mandatory disclosures for article 6 funds has been released, with major implications for asset managers in scope for SFDR. Read our summary and thoughts here.
2024 has been our busiest and most varied year yet, supporting our clients with ESG and sustainability related projects, regulatory alignment, voluntary frameworks and reporting. Read on for our reflections from the year.
PAI disclosures, ESG fund naming rules, SDR pre-contractual disclosure examples and more in the Danesmead ESG November 2024 Newsletter.
Announcements made by UK government on plans for developing and supporting the sustainable finance sector.
On 4th November 2024, EFRAG – the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group – published draft implementation guidance for transition plans, specifically targeting climate change mitigation (TPIG 4).