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[ecrea] New book: The Palgrave International Handbook of Women and Journalism
Thu Dec 19 18:14:57 GMT 2013
New book: The Palgrave International Handbook of Women and Journalism.
Europe is represented by individual chapters on Bulgaria, Estonia,
Germany, Finland, France, Norway, Poland, Russia, Spain, Sweden and
United Kingdom in The Palgrave International Handbook of Women and
Journalism.
http://us.macmillan.com/thepalgraveinternationalhandbookofwomenandjournalism/CarolynMByerly
This handbook is a timely academic adaptation of information contained
in the Global Report on the Status of Women in News Media, a study
commissioned by the International Women's Media Foundation and published
in 2011. The study was conducted by the book's editor, international
feminist media scholar, Carolyn M. Byerly. The text draws together the
most robust data from that study, presenting it in 29 chapters on
individual nations and three additional chapters with historical
background on women in journalism and a theoretical framework grounded
in feminist political economy. The book is the most expansive effort to
date to consider women's standing in the journalism profession across
the world. The contributing authors, in most cases the original
researchers for their respective nations in the Global Report study,
seek to question the status of women in newsrooms, asking how far women
have come and what their progress (or lack of progress) tells us about
women's right to communicate.
List of Tables
Notes on Contributors
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction; Carolyn M. Byerly
2. Factors Affecting the Status of Women Journalists: A Structural
Analysis; Carolyn M. Byerly
PART I: TAKING THE LEAD
3. Bulgaria: Cinderella Went to Market, with Consequences for Women
Journalists; Sorin Nastasia and Diana Iulia Nastasia
4. Estonia: Women Journalists and Women's Emancipation in Estonia; Diana
Iulia Nastasia, Barbi Pilvre and Kaja Tampere
5. Finland: Women Journalists, the Unequal Majority; Tarja Savolainen
and Henrika Zilliacus-Tikkanen
6. Russia: Women Journalists and the Engendered Transition; Diana Iulia
Nastasia and Ekaterina Bondarenko
7. Sweden: Women Reach Parity but Gender Troubles Persist; Maria Edstrom
8. South Africa: Newsrooms in Transition; Margaretha Geertsema-Sligh
PART II: MARKING SUBSTANTIAL PROGRESS
9. Canada: The Paradox of Women in News; Mary Lynn Young and Alison Beale
10. Israel: Women Still a Minority, but in a Better Place; Einat Lachover
11. Norway: The Uncomfortable Gender Gap in News Media; Turid Ovrebo
12. Poland: Women Journalists and 'The Polish Mother' Mentality; Diana
Iulia Nastasia and Sorin Nastasia
13. Spain: Many Women, Little Power; Juana Gallego
14. United Kingdom: Equal Opportunities in Theory, but not in Practice;
Kaitlynn Mendes
15. United States: Social Contradictions also Seen in Newsrooms; Carolyn
M. Byerly
PART III: NEGOTIATING THE CONSTRAINTS
16. Brazil: Need for National Debate on Women in Journalism; Thaïs de
Mendonça Jorge and Zélia Leal Adghirni
17. Chile: Female Journalists without Access to Power; Claudia Lagos and
Claudia Mellado
18. France: A Nuanced Feminization of Journalism; Eugénie Saitta
19. Germany: Parity Numbers-wise, but Women Face a Glass Ceiling;
Viktoria Akchurina
20. Kenya: 'A Girl May Not Sit on the Father's Stool'; Peter J. Kareithi
21. Mexico: Structural Challenges for Women in News Media; Aimée Vega
Montiel and Patricia Ortega Ramírez
22. Namibia: Women Make Strides in Post-independence Newsrooms; Maria
Mboono Nghidinwa
23. Uganda: Women Near Parity but Still Leaving Newsrooms; Barbara Kaija
PART IV: CHALLENGING THE BARRIERS
24. Australia: A Case of Systemic Inequity for Women Journalists; Louise
North
25. Bangladesh: Gender Inequality Results from Policy Inequity; Kajalie
Shehreen Islam
26. China: Women Journalists, Chinese News Media, and Historical Shifts;
Yu Shi
27. Ghana: Women in Decision-Making: New Opportunities, Old Story;
Audrey Gadzekpo
28. India: What You See Is Not What You Get; Ammu Joseph
29. Japan : Why So Few Women Journalists?; Reiko Ishiyama
30. Jordan: Towards Gender Balance in the Newsrooms; Abeer AlNajjar
31. Lebanon: A Struggle for Gender Equality, and Harassment-free
Newsrooms; Jad Melki and Sarah Mallat
PART V: CONCLUSION
32. Journalism and Women's Broader Struggle; Carolyn M. Byerly
Index
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