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Women lawyers at work: Hong Kong survey shows up gender woes, men who patronise in the workplace

  • Survey shows women lawyers face more gender discrimination than men, with microaggressions that hurt
  • Many say they’re advised to focus on ‘the softer side’ of law and leave the hard fields to men

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Alison Tsai (left), chairwoman of Women in Law Hong Kong, and Amita Haylock, partner at Mayer Brown. Photo: Jonathan Wong

Nicole Li* made her way successfully through law school and landed a job at a Hong Kong legal firm, but was not prepared for the gender discrimination she faced at work.

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Unsolicited comments about her clothes, patronising remarks about her work and being talked down to were just some ways men upset the lawyer, in her 20s, who has been practising for more than two years.

Men in the office providing “friendly advice” warned her that her career would be derailed if she ever decided to have a baby and went on maternity leave.

And there was the colleague who thought he was making a joke when he called her a rude word. Although offended, she felt she had to laugh along because of his seniority and to avoid being considered “too sensitive”.

“Even if you have good and encouraging male bosses and colleagues, having just one person terrorise or harass you at work can make the workplace very unsafe,” she said.

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