While all media workers face challenges particular to flexible specialization in a networked economy, there are differences in career outcomes for men and women, which occur as a result of gendered work cultures. Within media production these gendered contexts manifest through three main factors, which compromise women workers and can eventually cause them to exit their professions mid-career. Women leave media work because of a combination of the gendered nature of work cultures, the informalisation of the sector and structural restrictions placed on women’s agency to participate in networks. The interplay of these factors ultimately creates an impossible bind for many female media workers forcing them to exit media work
This paper looks at the predominance of freelancing in the film and television industries as a lens ...
The paper addresses the problem of why news content is dominated by what men consider to be newswort...
A survey of 715 U.S. newspaper journalists reveals women report higher levels of exhaustion and lowe...
While all media workers face challenges particular to flexible specialization in a networked econom...
This article concerns gendered sustainability of careers in the UK TV industry. Much academic scruti...
This article uses Acker’s concept of inequality regimes to analyze qualitative research findings on ...
In a case study of Irish television, gendered production processes are created through the channeli...
Although there is a body of scholarship concerning women’s roles in the British media industries, fe...
Are the media mirrors or makers? Does television merely reflect society or does it influence a socie...
During the 1980s, New Zealand’s Fourth Labour Government implemented a number of economic policy cha...
What are the critical challenges facing women and girls in the media? What we understand as ‘the med...
Critics and creative workers have recently highlighted the lack of women working in British televisi...
This article discusses how employment practices concerning writers of film and television contribute...
Despite the entry of women into the labour force in India, women still participate in paid employmen...
This article explores the impact of structural and technological change on women's employment in the...
This paper looks at the predominance of freelancing in the film and television industries as a lens ...
The paper addresses the problem of why news content is dominated by what men consider to be newswort...
A survey of 715 U.S. newspaper journalists reveals women report higher levels of exhaustion and lowe...
While all media workers face challenges particular to flexible specialization in a networked econom...
This article concerns gendered sustainability of careers in the UK TV industry. Much academic scruti...
This article uses Acker’s concept of inequality regimes to analyze qualitative research findings on ...
In a case study of Irish television, gendered production processes are created through the channeli...
Although there is a body of scholarship concerning women’s roles in the British media industries, fe...
Are the media mirrors or makers? Does television merely reflect society or does it influence a socie...
During the 1980s, New Zealand’s Fourth Labour Government implemented a number of economic policy cha...
What are the critical challenges facing women and girls in the media? What we understand as ‘the med...
Critics and creative workers have recently highlighted the lack of women working in British televisi...
This article discusses how employment practices concerning writers of film and television contribute...
Despite the entry of women into the labour force in India, women still participate in paid employmen...
This article explores the impact of structural and technological change on women's employment in the...
This paper looks at the predominance of freelancing in the film and television industries as a lens ...
The paper addresses the problem of why news content is dominated by what men consider to be newswort...
A survey of 715 U.S. newspaper journalists reveals women report higher levels of exhaustion and lowe...