| Call to Action - IWD 2010 |
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‘Equal rights, equal opportunities: Progress for all’ is the global United Nations theme for this year’s International Women’s Day (IWD).
Since
1911, the IWD has been a day to celebrate achievements in women’s
empowerment. It has also been a day to reflect on women’s struggles and
the structural barriers that continue to impede women’s progress.
One
arena of struggle is media, where unfair and unbalanced gender
representation has continued to impede women’s progress towards gender
equality. Over the past fifteen years progress towards
gender-responsive media has been painfully slow, as demonstrated by the
preliminary research results of the Fourth Global Media Monitoring
Project (GMMP 2010).
In 1995 only 17% of the persons seen,
heard, or read about in mainstream radio, television and print news
were women. Fifteen years later, women’s presence in the news remains
dismally low; they constitute only 24% - less than one quarter - of the
total number of people the news.
The rate of progress in other
indicators of gender in the news has been equally slow. In indicators
on the sex disaggregation of reporters in news stories for instance, 15
years ago 28% of news stories were reported by women. In 2010, the
statistic has risen to 37%, an increase of only 9% over 15 years, or
0.6% per year. More evidence on the slow progress is documented in Who Makes the News? Global Media Monitoring Project 2010 Preliminary Report.
The
World Association for Christian Communication (WACC) calls on
individuals, groups and organisations to act in order to accelerate the
pace of progress towards gender-equal, gender-fair media.
Download the preliminary report to use as evidence for advocacy and training to hasten the rate of change.
Participate in this year’s UNESCO’s Women Make the News campaign, themed ‘Towards Gender Sensitive Indicators for Media: Best practices for gender perspective in media and in media content’.
Share your experiences in training, advocacy or other actions with us for dissemination through the next issue of WACC’s Media & Gender Monitor newsletter.
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