{"title":"Executives, Professionals, and the Morality of Single-Sex Clubs","authors":"J. Taylor","doi":"10.5840/BPEJ200423318","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In recent years private single-sex clubs have been subjected to a great deal of moral criticism. They have been condemned as sexist, as illegitimately withholding social and professional benefits from the sex that they exclude, and (in their masculine form) as the remnants of a morally bankrupt patri archal system that should finally be swept away. Unfortunately for such clubs, the sound and fury that is currently directed at them signifies some thing rather than nothing. In Britain, legal steps have been taken to require that if such clubs admit persons of the excluded sex as Associate members, then the Associate members must receive the same club benefits as the Full members.1 More drastically, Lord Watson of Invergowrie, the Scottish Tourism, Culture, and Sport Minister, proposed that single-sex golf clubs be disbarred from hosting the British Open, while the all-male Augusta Nation al Golf Club in the United States has been subject to considerable public pressure to admit female members.2,3 Even single-sex clubs that are not so clearly in the public eye have been subjected to pressure to change. For ex ample, the all-male Kate Kennedy Club of St. Andrews University (dedi cated to maintaining the traditions of the university and the town, improving town-gown relations, and raising money for charity) has been criticized in the Scottish Parliament for its \"discriminatory\" membership policies.4 Moreover, the moral disapproval of such clubs is not only restricted to their traditional opponents on the political left. In 2001, for example, Iain Dun can Smith, the then leader of the Conservative Party, refused an invitation toj?in the all-male Car lton Club on the grounds that the membership of this","PeriodicalId":53983,"journal":{"name":"BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL ETHICS JOURNAL","volume":"23 1","pages":"93-105"},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2004-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL ETHICS JOURNAL","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5840/BPEJ200423318","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"ETHICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In recent years private single-sex clubs have been subjected to a great deal of moral criticism. They have been condemned as sexist, as illegitimately withholding social and professional benefits from the sex that they exclude, and (in their masculine form) as the remnants of a morally bankrupt patri archal system that should finally be swept away. Unfortunately for such clubs, the sound and fury that is currently directed at them signifies some thing rather than nothing. In Britain, legal steps have been taken to require that if such clubs admit persons of the excluded sex as Associate members, then the Associate members must receive the same club benefits as the Full members.1 More drastically, Lord Watson of Invergowrie, the Scottish Tourism, Culture, and Sport Minister, proposed that single-sex golf clubs be disbarred from hosting the British Open, while the all-male Augusta Nation al Golf Club in the United States has been subject to considerable public pressure to admit female members.2,3 Even single-sex clubs that are not so clearly in the public eye have been subjected to pressure to change. For ex ample, the all-male Kate Kennedy Club of St. Andrews University (dedi cated to maintaining the traditions of the university and the town, improving town-gown relations, and raising money for charity) has been criticized in the Scottish Parliament for its "discriminatory" membership policies.4 Moreover, the moral disapproval of such clubs is not only restricted to their traditional opponents on the political left. In 2001, for example, Iain Dun can Smith, the then leader of the Conservative Party, refused an invitation toj?in the all-male Car lton Club on the grounds that the membership of this
近年来,私人单一性别的俱乐部受到了大量的道德批评。他们被谴责为性别歧视者,被认为非法地剥夺了他们所排斥的性别的社会和职业利益,并且(以男性的形式)被认为是道德败坏的父权制度的残余,最终应该被扫除。不幸的是,对于这些俱乐部来说,目前针对他们的声音和愤怒意味着一些东西,而不是没有。在英国,已经采取了法律措施,要求如果这些俱乐部接纳被排除在外的性别的人作为准会员,那么准会员必须享受与正式会员相同的俱乐部福利更为激进的是,苏格兰旅游、文化和体育部长、因弗高里的沃森勋爵(Lord Watson of Invergowrie)提议取消单一性别高尔夫俱乐部举办英国公开赛的资格,而美国全男性的奥古斯塔国家高尔夫俱乐部(Augusta national golf Club)一直受到相当大的公众压力,要求其接纳女性会员。即使是在公众视野中不那么明显的单身男女俱乐部也受到了改变的压力。例如,圣安德鲁斯大学的凯特·肯尼迪俱乐部(致力于维护大学和城镇的传统,改善城镇与学生之间的关系,并为慈善事业筹集资金)因其“歧视性”的会员政策而受到苏格兰议会的批评此外,对这些俱乐部的道德反对不仅限于它们在政治上的传统对手。例如,2001年,当时的保守党领袖伊恩·邓·史密斯(Iain Dun can Smith)拒绝了一项邀请。在全是男性的卡尔顿俱乐部的理由是,这个会员