For many women journalists, workplaces are dangerous: Study
Lazarus
Sauti
The majority of abuse,
threats and harassment facing women in the media comes not from the work they
do, but from the places they work.
According to a study
released recently from the International News Safety Institute and the
International Women’s Media Foundation, about 64 percent of women reported
facing abuse, threats and intimidation related to their work, and more than
half of that came from a boss, supervisor or co-worker.
INSI Director Hannah Storm
said in a presser: “When we talk about safety for the media, we often think in
terms of staying safe in war zones, civil unrest and environmental disasters,
but how often do we think of the office as a hostile environment?”
“What this ground-breaking
survey shows is that women journalists are often at risk in their own work
places as well: targeted by their colleagues, and because they are let down by
the very people they should be able to trust, the violence and harassment they
face goes widely unreported and therefore unpunished.”
The study was conducted
between July and November of this year, and included 875 women from around the
world, with about 21 percent from North America, 19 percent from Europe and 28
percent from Asia and the Pacific.
More than 41 percent of
respondents were between 25 and 34.
More than 82 percent
worked as reporters.
About 49 percent worked in
newspapers, 23 percent in magazines, 21 percent in TV and 16 percent in radio.
When asked about sexual
harassment, more than 45 percent reported that harassment came from colleagues,
and more than 28 percent from their bosses.
The study also asked if
organisations prepared their employees to handle harassment and threats.
Of more than 400 people
who answered that question, the majority said no.
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