>>11719033What the other anon said with a lot of HR experience beforehand, like, since they got their Associate's, all professional master's like the ones I mentioned + JD, and working for non-profits focused on women.
They can do the same jobs as any other non-STEM/Social Science degree like Philosophy and Religious Studies, but they just find a job a little harder given the stigma of their degree.
>>11723509Worst part is that HR departments (academic) do have strong feminist views either way since they are majority composed of women, so regardless of the existence of the Women's Studies major, they are still going to favor women when there aren't many women in a given department (either business or academic), etc.
>>11724509HR is a relatively new field, anon. Why do you think some anons in the more poltically-oriented boards hate their guts since they believe they don't need it given their costs and the duties of hiring someone should be in the hands of the manager of a given deparment like accounting, or so.