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New study shows only 0.30 % of news stories in Nepali media have bylines of women journalists

The Annapurna Express

The Annapurna Express

New study shows only 0.30 % of news stories in Nepali media have bylines of women journalists

Out of 21,919 news items published in 20 media outlets, only 76 had bylines of female journalists

A study launched today by Media Action Nepal has concluded that Nepali media give less priority to issues of women and people with different sexual orientations. The research report titled 'Gender Sensitivity in Nepali Media' found that newspapers and online media in Nepal have not published gender issues as a matter of public importance.

Out of 21,919 news items published in 20 media outlets, only 76 had bylines of female journalists. This is only about 0.30 percent of the total news published by those media, the study revealed.

According to the study, out of the total number of media materials published in those media over the period of two months, only 388 or 1.67 percent of news stories are about women and people belonging to different sexual orientations. Of those 388 women and people with different sexual orientations, 386 are on women’s issues and only two are about sexual minorities.

Highlighting that free and responsible media is a key component of democratic societies and essential to the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms, Mathew Loken, Councellor and Head, Political, Economic, and Public Affairs at High Commission of Canada in Delhi remarked that it is critical that a free press reflects the diverse views of those within society, which includes the perspective of women and girls. MAN’s approach of working closely with industry groups increases the likelihood that there can be immediate and tangible results for advancing women’s empowerment in the Nepali media, he added. 

Underscoring that Nepali women are constantly facing gender discrimination and problems arising out of patriarchal power relations, Laxman Datt Pant, Chairperson of Media Action Nepal urged media to highlight these issues and make the relevant stakeholders accountable. "Giving more space to women and people with different sexual orientations is more urgent than ever. There is a growing need to make the media inclusive by ensuring gender equality through the implementation of the Gender-Sensitive Indicators and the Code of Conduct for Journalists", Pant added.

Aimed at measuring the level of gender sensitivity in media and determining how much and what kind of news content about women and people with different sexual orientations are published in Nepali media, this study assessed a total of 23,515 media contents published by a total of 20 media outlets–three national dailies and three online news portals operating in Kathmandu, and one national daily and one online news portal each from seven provinces.

It analyzed news stories and other materials published by 14 media outlets (seven daily newspapers and seven online news portals) from the seven provinces during the period of two months from August 1 to September 30, 2021, and six media outlets (three daily newspapers and three online news portals from Kathmandu) from August 30 to November 1, 2021.

The study recommended that media houses must make clear policy arrangements to strengthen diversity, gender identity, and inclusion in the workplace. The media can promote gender equality, justice, and equality only when the content they produce and the workplace they develop is gender-sensitive, it added. Read full report here: https://mediaactionnepal.org/reports/