‘If You’re Not Centering the People Who Are Most Impacted, Your Policy Solution Will Fall Apart’: Gaylynn Burroughs Is Fighting for Economic Justice at the Intersections

Burroughs, the vice president of education and workplace justice at the National Women’s Law Center and a contributor to Ms., connected the dots between poverty, policy and culture change in the latest episode of the Ms. Studios podcast Looking Back, Moving Forward. 

“For the average, working woman out there, these are still tough times,” Gaylynn Burroughs told Ms. (Les Talusan)

In a time of economic uncertainty, Gaylynn Burroughs—vice president for education and workplace justice at the National Women’s Law Center—is leveraging advocacy, policy and litigation to advance economic justice for women across lines of race and class. 

Her work at NWLC is just one of many roles the attorney and advocate has held that focused on issues economic equity: Burroughs previously led the Employment Task Force and the work of the Economic Security team at the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, and served as policy director for the Feminist Majority and Feminist Majority Foundation, which publishes Ms., and as a staff attorney in the Family Defense Practice at the Bronx Defenders.

While at the Defenders, Burroughs wrote a piece that’s featured in the 50 Years of Ms. collection that shined a light on the injustices embedded in our economic institutions, particularly for Black women and children.

As part of the third episode of the Ms. Studios podcast Looking Back, Moving Forward, I talked to Burroughs about the economic landscape facing women today, the ways our economy is failing women at the intersections, and how we can continue, in this challenging moment, to advance our long-term visions of gender and economic justice.