Objective Summary of "Why Journalism Has A Gender Problem" by Corinne Segal:
The journalism industry struggles with a lack of female and minority leadership. Despite women making up 35.4% of newsroom supervisors, this number has changed little since 1999. Women hold leadership roles in only a few major newspapers and represent 37.2% of overall newspaper staff. Racial minorities are even less represented, making up only 13% of employees. In broadcast news, women are 31% of news directors and 20% of general managers, with even fewer in radio.
Internationally, men dominate management roles in media companies, holding 73% of these positions. Although women start their careers in journalism at similar rates as men, their numbers decline significantly after 20 years. Factors contributing to this disparity include the focus on "hard" news, which is typically male-dominated, and cultural attitudes that challenge female leadership.
While some hope that digital media might change hiring trends, men still predominantly lead many new media ventures. The overall findings suggest systemic issues within the industry that hinder progress toward gender and racial equality in leadership roles.