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UN
Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka (left) and actress Geena Davis,
founder and chair of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media. Photo: UN
Women/Ryan Brown (file)
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Actress
Geena Davis on Thursday told a standing-room only event on gender and the media at
the United Nations that the paucity of female characters in entertainment media
for young children can be changed overnight, saying: “We don’t have to fix the
‘unconscious bias’ they are raised with later on. We can fix it from the very
beginning.”
The
Academy Award-Winning Actor, who founded the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in
Media, said the data from her research shows “disturbing” results of how
“profoundly fewer” female characters are in family movies and television
programmes aimed at young children under the age of 11.
Ms.
Davis, known for her portrayals of strong female characters in films such as
“Thelma and Louise,” went on to say the message the children were getting
through entertainment media was of “hyper-sexualized” female characters judged
by their appearance.
“If
we added female characters at the rate we have been over past 20 years, we will
achieve parity in 700 years,” Ms. Davis said, adding that she believed gender
parity in children’s entertainment media can be reached dramatically faster –
possibly even seven years.
She
noted that the message kids are getting through entertainment media is that
women and girls are second class citizens.
“There
is one sector where this gross imbalance can be changed overnight and that is
on screen,” she said. “We don’t have to fix the unconscious bias they are
raised with later on. We can fix it from the very beginning.”
Ms.
Davis was speaking at an event on the side lines of the 59th session of the
Commission on the Status of Women taking place at UN Headquarters to promote
gender equality in and through the media, as central to the so-called post-2015
Sustainable Development Goals that will drive the global development agenda for
years to come.
Irina
Bokova, Director-General of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO), in
remarks read by one of her deputies, said women represent “just third of
reporters, and quarters of media decision makers.”
“Only
a quarter of people questioned, heard or seen or read about in the media are
women,” according to Ms. Bokova. “How can we get the whole full story with only
half of the world’s voices? We do need to redress this imbalance.”
Phumzile
Mlambo-Ngcuka, Executive Director of UN Women, which co-hosted the event with
UNESCO, and Ms. Bokova agreed on the imperative to change the underlying
stereotypes of women.
“Progress
is not the same as success,” the UNESCO head said.
Source:
http://www.un.org/apps/news

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