Opinion

Leader: Why women’s careers need a CMYA boost

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Comments

  1. i agree , whilst there is a lack of females there is also a lack of targeting of mature students. to be a member of the ciob now you have to be a student or degree qualified. come to them as time served or non degree and ciob chokes. also whilst its great that one person wins coming from a large supportive firm. i think that some one in a small firm bring on new skills and ideas has to work ten times harder to do there role. we are missing the people at the bottom grass roots and only looking at the high flyers

  2. The fact that proportionality of women in construction is ridiculously low cannot be hidden behind any rationale or presumption. However, when considered in the wider context, there are representations from women in areas such as project management, quantity surveying, architecture and so on. In one of our current £30m project, the Employer’s Rep, Lead Architect, Lead PQS and Construction Project Manager leading the planning activities from the [Wokingham] Council are all women – however, the current CMYA rules will rule all of them out as none would be site-based. I wonder if the division between the Contracting side and the Client/Consultant side is widening in this respect.

    Is it time to consider a wider definition for CMYA?

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