Celia Taylor
Celia Taylor
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Celia Taylor came to the University of Denver Sturm College of Law from Columbia University, where she taught a course in legal writing and research while obtaining an LLM in international human rights law. Prior to Columbia, Taylor was in private practice in San Francisco, specializing in corporate and securities law. Taylor currently teaches primarily in the corporate area, but has an abiding interest in human rights law. She is currently working to develop programs to build relationships with law schools in Central and South America.
How quickly things change—and not for the better. In June, Fortune magazine reported that woman were “making strides” because a whopping 6.4% of CEOs were female. As sad as that figure is, it just got much worse. Avon recently announced that CEO Sheri McCoy will leave the 131-year-old cosmetics firm in March. This news broke just one day Oreo and Cadbury owner Mondelez announced that its longtime CEO Irene Rosenfeld will give up the top spot at the company later this year. Moreover, let us not forget that in June, Marissa Myers stepped down as the CEO of Yahoo (now known as Altaba). Each of the CEO’s faced harsh criticism from activist shareholders during her tenure. And so, for now, we are down to 5.8% female representation of woman in Fortune 500 companies. Some strides.