This article explores the impact of structural and technological change on women's employment in the UK television industry. It looks at the challenges faced by women in working in what has become since the mid-1980s a largely freelance industry where short-term contracts, informal recruitment procedures and long, unpredictable work schedules mean that women find it increasingly difficult to combine a career and family. Through case studies of individual careers, of a women's magazine programme for S4C Digital and a survey of women's credits on a selection of the newer channels (Sky One, UK Living and Channel 5), it argues that technological advances in digital transmission and production will not improve working conditions and opportunitie...
Are the media mirrors or makers? Does television merely reflect society or does it influence a socie...
From its beginnings in 1923, the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in supp...
In May 1923, the fledgling BBC launched its first daily programme to be aimed at a female audience, ...
Although there is a body of scholarship concerning women’s roles in the British media industries, fe...
This article examines the impact of recent changes in the management and organization of British bro...
The labour market in Britain's television industry has been transformed in the last 20 years with th...
This article uses Acker’s concept of inequality regimes to analyze qualitative research findings on ...
British television could be in for a major face-lift in the 1980s. As well as the increase in satell...
Changes in the competitive and regulative conditions of British television over the 1980s and 1990s ...
This article concerns gendered sustainability of careers in the UK TV industry. Much academic scruti...
While all media workers face challenges particular to flexible specialization in a networked econom...
\u201cTV for women\u201d represents both a strong, traditional factor in the medium\u2019s history a...
This article explores the relationship between management strategy, technological change nod collect...
Research on creative work typically focuses either on precarious work and employment or on creative ...
The parallel histories of the establishment of regional television news and the changing patterns of...
Are the media mirrors or makers? Does television merely reflect society or does it influence a socie...
From its beginnings in 1923, the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in supp...
In May 1923, the fledgling BBC launched its first daily programme to be aimed at a female audience, ...
Although there is a body of scholarship concerning women’s roles in the British media industries, fe...
This article examines the impact of recent changes in the management and organization of British bro...
The labour market in Britain's television industry has been transformed in the last 20 years with th...
This article uses Acker’s concept of inequality regimes to analyze qualitative research findings on ...
British television could be in for a major face-lift in the 1980s. As well as the increase in satell...
Changes in the competitive and regulative conditions of British television over the 1980s and 1990s ...
This article concerns gendered sustainability of careers in the UK TV industry. Much academic scruti...
While all media workers face challenges particular to flexible specialization in a networked econom...
\u201cTV for women\u201d represents both a strong, traditional factor in the medium\u2019s history a...
This article explores the relationship between management strategy, technological change nod collect...
Research on creative work typically focuses either on precarious work and employment or on creative ...
The parallel histories of the establishment of regional television news and the changing patterns of...
Are the media mirrors or makers? Does television merely reflect society or does it influence a socie...
From its beginnings in 1923, the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in supp...
In May 1923, the fledgling BBC launched its first daily programme to be aimed at a female audience, ...