There have been many recent media reports about the online harassment of women journalists working in technology, particularly the video gaming industry. However, little research has focused on this aspect, by looking at specific occupations, or analysing the implications for women and society. This paper is a feminist study of the experiences of sexist abuse of a sample of women journalists writing about technology. It is a commentary on the results of a questionnaire-based study of 102 women (and their approximately 300 comments) that work in what has emerged as one of the frontlines of the struggle for gender equality. The research looks at the extent of the abuse, the harm it causes and how women are reacting to it. Most of the particip...
Women have traditionally been defined in journalistic studies as the ‘unaccessed voice group’ due to...
This paper is concerned with how Australian print news media journalists, male and female, rem...
Across time, in a variety of forms and spaces - from homes and workplaces to digital domains of soci...
With the expansion of the internet, the conditions for the online journalists have changed. Feedback...
The Internet and digital technologies have delivered countless benefits to journalism. However, the...
This study examines the experiences of female journalists in Nepal in the context of rapidly growing...
This research project explores the impact of gendered harassment across digital platforms on high-...
Abuse directed at visible and audible women demonstrates that cyberspace, once heralded as a new, de...
Gender is a critical tool for studying power dynamics within various organisations. The primary obje...
Previous research indicates that women face a disproportionate amount of online harassment resultin...
The primary responsibility of newspapers is to disseminate information to the public and, hence this...
Gender inequalities have been at the core of debates and studies about media and communication for a...
Gender inequalities have been at the core of debates and studies about media and communication for a...
Online abuse of journalists through comments below articles or on Twitter is now ubiquitous. The tou...
Online abuse communicated via social networking sites has increased considerably in recent years, wi...
Women have traditionally been defined in journalistic studies as the ‘unaccessed voice group’ due to...
This paper is concerned with how Australian print news media journalists, male and female, rem...
Across time, in a variety of forms and spaces - from homes and workplaces to digital domains of soci...
With the expansion of the internet, the conditions for the online journalists have changed. Feedback...
The Internet and digital technologies have delivered countless benefits to journalism. However, the...
This study examines the experiences of female journalists in Nepal in the context of rapidly growing...
This research project explores the impact of gendered harassment across digital platforms on high-...
Abuse directed at visible and audible women demonstrates that cyberspace, once heralded as a new, de...
Gender is a critical tool for studying power dynamics within various organisations. The primary obje...
Previous research indicates that women face a disproportionate amount of online harassment resultin...
The primary responsibility of newspapers is to disseminate information to the public and, hence this...
Gender inequalities have been at the core of debates and studies about media and communication for a...
Gender inequalities have been at the core of debates and studies about media and communication for a...
Online abuse of journalists through comments below articles or on Twitter is now ubiquitous. The tou...
Online abuse communicated via social networking sites has increased considerably in recent years, wi...
Women have traditionally been defined in journalistic studies as the ‘unaccessed voice group’ due to...
This paper is concerned with how Australian print news media journalists, male and female, rem...
Across time, in a variety of forms and spaces - from homes and workplaces to digital domains of soci...