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The university study found that agencies in areas where women have traditionally been better represented
-- including health, human rights and education -- still have the highest number of women in leadership. At the same time, it found a growing number of women breaking into areas traditionally dominated by men, including administration and budget. For example, Laura Anglin is New York's budget director. The study found governors across the country have appointed 15 women to head departments of administration, and 10 to lead management and budget agencies. Former Vermont Gov. Madeline Kunin, a Democrat who served from 1985 until 1991 and was the state's first female governor, was heartened to hear of the strides women have made. She noted that some of her appointments "raised some eyebrows" because they didn't have the typical resumes of traditional candidates for the job. "If a woman had 10 years that she stayed at home with her family, a traditional assessment would have been that she did nothing in those years," Kunin said. "My assessment was different because I know when I was home with my kids, I was active in the schools and community organizations, and of course you learn a great deal from bringing up children." As the number of women in high-ranking state policy positions rises, Kunin hopes, there eventually won't be a need to study the issue because it will become generally accepted that women belong in those jobs. ___ On the Net: Center for Women in Government & Civil Society: http://www.cwig.albany.edu/
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