Featured White Papers
- Oct. 14th: Simplified IT with Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) (ZDNet)
- PCI DSS therapy for the smaller retailer (McAfee)
- The rise of Web commuting (Citrix Online)
Women's Quarterly
Articles in Summer 2002 issue of Women's Quarterly
- She ain't necessarily so: Jonathan V. Last takes us to the newest frontier in sexual politicstransgender chic
by Jonathan V. Last - Correspondence
- When Harry became Sally: Charlotte Allen gets really confused when she goes to a symposium on the legal requirements of the transgender community
by Charlotte Allen - A few words about outfits: Renee A. James ponders a little-studied difference between men and women - One Last Observation - Brief Article
by Renee A. James - The token man: Heather has two readers; John Zardi checks out the "alternative families" section at Politics & Prose - Brief Article
by John Zardi - A tale of two schools - Interview - Karen Stabiner
- The odd couple: single-sex education advocate Leonard Sax wonders why the Bush administration is getting all the blame for something Kay Bailey Hutchison arid Hillary Clinton teamed up to do for the nation's public schools - and credit
by Leonard Sax - Poll-pourri - teenagers on tattoos, smoking, and drugs - Brief Article
by Karlyn Bowman - Mean like me: a feminist author discovers that women aren't always nice. Betsy Hart says this isn't news to anyone who survived seventh grade. - Woman's Inhumanity to Woman - book review
by Betsy Hart - The pajama party that failed: Oxygen was supposed to be a breath of fresh air for women. Shannon James explains why the ratings-starved network is gasping - Oxygen Media Inc
by Shannon James - Becky Sharp comes to America: Judy Bachrach shows how fallen editrix Tina Brown is the reincarnation of Thackeray's seductive, social-climbing heroine
by Judy Bachrach - Confessions of a former girl. . - Diary - Odd Girl Out: The Hidden Culture of Aggression in Girls - book review
by Charlotte Hays - Disarming women: an iconoclastic, new brand of "individualist feminism"ifeminismsuggests that abused women might do well to put their trust in Smith and Wesson
by Richard W. Stevens