1982 Westerfield Award: Phyllis A. Wallace
![Phyllis A. Wallace](/sites/default/files/styles/original/public/media/image/Phyllis_Ann_Wallace_Professor_receiving_award_from_National_Economic_Association_2_8_1982_high_res_shp_738.jpg?itok=vALd_YEu)
Professor Phyllis A. Wallace (second from right) receives the Westerfield Award for black economists with outstanding achievements from the National Economic Association (NEA), 1982. Also shown, left to right: Bernard Anderson (NEA President), Margaret Simms (Chair), Alfred Osborne (former NEA President).
Phyllis Ann Wallace, a voice for anti-discrimination in the workplace, joined the MIT Sloan School of Management faculty as a visiting professor in 1973. Her promotion to full professor in 1975 made Wallace the first woman to gain tenure at Sloan.
She spearheaded a precedent-setting legal decision in a federal case that reversed sex and race discrimination in American industry. Wallace wrote about the case in her book Equal Employment Opportunity and the AT&T Case (MIT Press, 1976).
The Samuel Z. Westerfield Award is conferred every 3-5 years by the National Economic Association on an African American economist with a distinguished record throughout their career of scholarship, teaching, and public service.