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NOT THERE YET: COVERAGE OF WOMEN IN FOREIGN NEWS: A 1995 MULTI-NATIONAL STUDY By Anat First and Donald L. Shaw The most prominent institution that creates "the pictures in our head" about the public sphere is the news media (Shaw and McCombs, 1993). In media news, women are mostly absent (Steeves, 1993). According to Gallagher, no country with available data reported that more than 20% of the news was about women, and in most cases, the figure was much lower (1981). Steeves (1993) argues that little has changed since 1981. She claims that "Most existing news about women is trivial - related to family status or appearance. Where important women's activities are covered, they are often simultaneously undermined or demeaned" (Steeves 1993, p. 41). Walter Lippmann, a pioneer in developing the ideas about different realities, was also one of the first to apply those notions to the field of mass communication. In Public Opinion (1922), Lippmann discussed the role of the media in the process of the social construction of an individual's reality. Lippmann distinguished between the world that actually exists out there, and the "pseudo" environment - that is, our private perception of the world, often influenced by the media. Although he planted the seeds of the theory, the broader systematic work on the social construction of reality began in the 1960's with Schutz (1967), Berger and Luckmann (1967), and others. This line of research has implications for women. This study summarizes how women are portrayed in the press in a sample of 41 countries. WOMEN AND THE NEWS AGENDA Some feminist approaches to coverage of women, based on critical thinking, see the media's power originating from cultural domination (Williams, 1977). These approaches attempt to expose the primary assumptions that construct the governing political and social order. From a feminist point of view, the separation between the two spheres, public and private - a separation that reflects unequal distribution by gender - creates a dichotomous world of images, roles and expectations for men and women (Herzog, 1994). In this, press is important. According to the traditional, libertarian theory, democracy requires that the mass media represent the full range of views in society. Today, the mass media, especially the news broadcasts, are the major forces in creating and maintaining the public sphere. Thus, one important function of the news is to retain a public sphere - open and accessible to all - as a key component of modern, participatory democratic life. Women's access to the public sphere can be measured by analyzing the content of the news. For instance, researchers might ask how women in the news are portrayed or how many stories on the network news highlight women. As an illustration, in the United States of America, the percentage of stories focusing on women as the main "actor" was: 13.7% of ABC's news stories, 10.2% of CBS's stories, and 8.9% of NBC's stories (Lont, 1995). In general, "women were rarely the subject or focus of interviews on the nightly news." (Lont, 1995, pp. 221) In India, until few years ago, women were never mentioned in the press. Today there is more coverage of women, but most of it is negative, such as when women are victims in rape cases (Media Report To Women, 1996). Another way to assess the representation of women in the public sphere is to look at the production of the news. Until recently, television news, much like radio news, was relatively closed to most women in the United States of America This began to change in 1991 when "Not only were there more women reporting, but the majority of women by 1992 had moved into the ranks of the top 100 correspondents." (Foote, 1995) In general, there are still fewer women than men in high-powered positions in American television news, and women reporters are outnumbered by male reporters by almost 4 to 1 (Lont, 1995). In the body of research dealing with women and the public sphere, we find literature about the hegemonic model, which excludes women from many "public" domains and reproduces gender inequality, in both theory and everyday life. Women frame their existence in a reality dominated by this ideology - or so goes the argument. The private sphere refers to the "closed" worlds of the personal, biographical and domestic, whereas the public sphere relates to the "open" spaces of work, politics, mass media and international affairs. (O'Sullivan et al., 1994) In the simplest terms, the public sphere is the "realm of our social life in which citizens confer about matters of general interest." (Hallin, 1994, p. 20) We accept the notion that the existing social order distinguishes between the public and private spheres. This order has as a premise that politics, by its nature, is part of the public sphere, and power, as traditionally defined, is control over the institutions and organizations that are practicing politics (Hezog, 1994). Liberal political theories see the political system as an arena in which various groups compete in order to represent different interests. Believing that equal rights and opportunities have to be preserved, liberal theory maintains that women should have equal opportunity to be part of the public sphere. CONSTRUCTING REALITY: THE "SECOND DIMENSION" OF AGENDA SETTING Agenda-setting research has argued that the press seems to tell people what to think about, although not what to think. But recently, McCombs has found that the way messages are framed does, in fact, seem to tell people somewhat how to think about news topics ( McCombs, 1995). The idea of the second dimension of agenda-setting is that "beyond the agenda of objects there is also another dimension to consider. Each of these objects has numerous attributes, those characteristics and properties that fill out the picture of each object. Just as objects vary in salience, so do the attributes of each object." (McCombs, 1995, p.6) Thus "How news frames impact the public agenda is the emerging second dimension of agenda setting." (McCombs, 1995, p.6) The interesting question about the second dimension of agenda setting concerns the transmission of attributes; specifically, through what process does the transmission of attributes occur? We suggest that the second dimension of agenda-setting can be understood best as a process of reality construction - that is, how news messages frame the women they cover. Here, we use the second dimension to analyze the appearance of women in newspapers and international broadcasts news. The second dimension argument enables us to explore the perspectives and frames in which women are presented in news broadcasts. First we ask how often the are women in the news? Then, how are they presented? Through salient attributes of women's presentation in the news, the media constructs the "pictures in our head" about women in the public sphere. STUDY QUESTIONS We ask, using a sample of the world press: 1) are women more likely to be presented on issues about the private sphere than the public sphere; 2) do more women appear in news stories in "yWestern" countries than in news stories from "Patriarchal" countries; and 3) finally, are women journalists more likely to write about women's issues? METHOD Sample The "Foreign News and International News Flow" project* sample consisted of 7,474 international news stories taken from 143 newspapers or broadcasts (both television and radio) from 41 countries (see list in appendix 1). These data were collected for two days Sunday, May 7, 1995, and Saturday , May 8 - the fiftieth anniversary of the end of World War ((. Data collectors in each participating country** were asked to choose not more than ten media sources, and to emphasize stories from newspapers and just two or three broadcast programs. For example, in Israel the selected media sources were: 1)"Ha'aretz," a newspaper widely read by government officials and other elites ; 2)"Yediot Achronot," the leading popular newspaper; 3) "Reshet B," a "public" radio station with several news programs; 4) "Galey-Zahal", a popular radio station, controlled by the army. The data collection team chose two out of three main news programs from each radio station; the length of each program is at least one and a half - hour long each day (in the morning, at noon and in late afternoon) and one hour foreign news magazine (in the afternoon.); 5) "Mabat," the nightly television national main newscast (length of one hour from 20.00 to *Thanks to professor Robert L. Stevenson from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who is one of the initiators of this project and in charge on the quantitative part, for providing the data. **Moslty the data collectors were professors and student. 21.00); and 6) "Channel 2," complementary newscast on the commercial television network. There are only two Hebrew television channels in Israel, one public and one commercial. We used the entire sample to answer both our first and third question, how are women likely to be presented and about what do women journalist write?. To answer our second question about women being more likely to appear in news stories in "yWestern" countries than in news stories from "Patriarchal" countries, we divided part of the 41 countries into nine geographical groups. The division was mostly accord geographical locations: 1)the USA; 2) Latin America (Mexico, Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Peru, and Venezuela); 3) Scandinavia (Norway, and Finland); 4) Western Europe (Austria, Germany, and Netherlands); 5) Eastern Europe (Bulgaria, Hungary, Slovenia, and the Ukraine); 6) Africa (Kenya, Nigeria, and Cameroon); 7) the Middle East (Israel, Kuwait, and Lebanon); 8) Far East 1 ( China and India); and 9) Far East 2 (Japan, Taiwan, and Hong Kong). We divided the Far East into two groups based on their economics and modernization level. Content Analysis The quantitative codebook for this study is an expanded version of the codebook used in an international from made twenty years ago (for details see Stevenson, 1984, pp. 21-36). The revised codebook includes 28 variables: Name of the country, medium, date, focus of the story, sources, gender of correspondents, dateline, most important country (the first three), main topic (first three), four types of events, main actor, gender of the three main actors, prominence, and specific events. One of the new variables added to the 1995 study is gender. Coding Procedures. The data analysis team in each country received the international codebook and some examples of how to analyze the news. In Israel, for example, at the beginning of April, 1995, Hill Nosek* assembled a team that included lecturers, supervisors, and others who handled various technical aspects of the project (for instance, translating the codebook into Hebrew). The coders were students at the New School of Journalism in the College of Management in Tel Aviv. The Israeli team began by practicing news (from all the media) with the student' coders working in deferent classes under the supervision of at least one of the research team. During these classes we discussed with the students the coding instructions and problems not covered by the instructions. After reaching an acceptable level of intercoder reliability, coders began to work on the two-day news sample. Much of the coding was mechanical. The difficult variables were the topics, focus of the story, prominence, and various types of events. Coders and supervisors worked together to resolve difficulties. * Hill Nosek is the Israeli partner in the Study of "Foreign News and International News Flow". FINDINGS AND DISCUSSION We present the results in three sections that reflect the questions asked earlier: Question 1 In general, few stories from the major news broadcasts throughout the world present women as the main actors. Women had this role in only 8% of the leading topics of the news stories sampled. Table 1 shows that women were mostly absent in the majority of the topics. Not surprisingly, women tended to appear in news related to the private sphere (for example, entertainment/personalities, 25%; human rights, 22%), while they nearly vanished as main actors in news related to the public sphere (for example, international politics, 4%; international economics/trade, 1%; and globalization/internationalization, 0%). Women were main actors frequently only in news that related to gender issues (41%). Our paper focuses on two days in May, when the celebration of the end of the Second World War took place all over the world, especially in those countries that had been involved in the war. Looking at the type of stories that can be related to Second World War, we find that women were absent. For example, No woman were main actors in the topic of history. Evidently war is a male "business" and women are excluded from it - at least in most of the news coverage of the end of the war. Table 1 Rounded Percentages of the Gender of the Main Actor by Main Topic of the News Story Across All Countries Gender of Main Actor Not Given Male Female Both Total Main Topic of story None 38 48 14 0 100 International Politics 30 64 4 2 100 International Economics/Trade 53 45 1 1 100 International military/Defense/conflict 37 54 5 4 100 International Aid/Development 48 47 4 1 100 Domestic Politics 33 67 2 2 100 Domestic Economics 62 33 3 2 100 Social Services/Problems/Education 51 37 7 5 100 Crime/Justice/Police 56 38 2 4 100 Cultural/Art/History/Performance/Review 38 48 10 4 100 Sport 28 61 9 2 100 Entertainment/Personalities 10 60 25 5 100 Oddities/Animals/Human Interest 39 35 18 8 100 Energy/Conservation/Environment 74 23 3 0 100 Natural/Disasters/Accident/Weather 74 19 2 5 100 Civil War/Domestic Conflict 61 32 4 3 100 Religion 45 44 4 7 100 Human Rights 28 44 22 6 100 Globalization/Internationalization 47 47 0 6 100 Migration/Immigration 57 25 5 3 100 Gender Issues 29 30 21 0 100 Ethnic Issues/identity/Politics/Assimilation 49 40 4 7 100 History/Historical Feature 50 50 0 0 100 Science/Technology 50 38 12 0 100 Other 50 37 10 4 100 Question 2 According to libertarian theory, democracy requires that news media be open and accessible to all. Yet, some regimes tend to restrict media accessibility for cultural and political reasons. Western countries use democratic ideas about the media more than other countries. We grouped the countries according to geography, but this also, in many cases, reflects cultural and political divisions. We are nonetheless aware that our organization could be done in different ways because of the difficulties in grouping cultures. One challenge of our groupings, for example, is that to include Israel with Kuwait and Lebanon, combines countries that are very different in their regimes and culture. Prior to analysis, assumed that women would appear more in "yWestern" countries' news, than in "Patriarchal" countries, in which men have long dominated political religious or cultural life. Table 2 shows that our hypothesis was not supported - women were not part of the news anywhere. Looking at the gender as main "actor" (female and both) in the news, we find that only Scandinavia reached 20% female. On the other end, the Middle East, the Far East (Japan, Taiwan and Hong Kong) and Eastern Europe had the lowest percentages. These findings may reflect the notion that some of the countries are young democracies. Moreover, in some of the countries, women's status may be more affected by culture than by formal democracy. In addition, across all the countries, women appeared as the main actors in only 7% of the long stories, in only 7% of medium-length stories, and only in just 5% of the short TABLE 2 Percentage* of the Gender of the Main Actors and the Prominence of the News Stories by Countries Gender as Main Actor Prominence Story length for women and both Country Man female both genders long medium short USA 55 7 2 4 7 9 Latin America 55 4 7 5 5 3 Western Europe 42 6 6 4 4 8 Scandinavia 52 11 9 8 13 9 Eastern Europe 53 4 0 7 4 5 Africa 70 6 2 5 7 5 Middle East 58 3 1 2 3 4 Far East 1 63 10 0 15 11 2 Far East 48 4 1 9 5 2 *Rounded stories. Only India ( Far East group 1) exceeded 20% of women as the main actors in the news. We further analyzed the type of news stories in which women are the main actors. Our categories were: news (with or without picture), picture only, editorial/commentary, letter, and cartoon. Women were included as main actors in 6%, of news and 6% editorial/commentaries, and they appeared in 14% of the pictures and 2% of the letters. No woman was the subject of a cartoon. Usually cartoons about international issues describe political situations. Since women tend to be excluded from politics, their chances of being the subject of a cartoon is minimal. Our findings corroborate other research regarding the portrayal of women in the news. We agree with Steeves' assessment that in news, women were mostly absent in the 1980's, and nothing much has changed since then.(Steeves, 1993) American news stories show the same trend as the news in other nations. Question 3 Another way to examine women's accessibility to the public sphere is by focusing on the gender of the correspondents and by cross-referencing their gender with the subjects they covered (according to the public sphere vs. the private sphere distinction). Women correspondents were by-lined in news stories infrequently: in the USA, 18%; Latin America, 18%; Western Europe, 8%; Scandinavia, 13%; Eastern Europe, 13%; Africa, 18%; Middle East, 6; Far East (1), 3%; and Far East (2), 4%. In general, less than 20% of the news correspondents were women. A second dimension in understanding how women news correspondents frame their existence in the public sphere is to examine the subjects of the stories they cover. Table 3 shows that women tended to cover stories that are considered most appropriate for women. Women covered more gender issues (31%) and culture stories (15%) than international issues (international politics, 7%; international economics and trade, 5%; or international defense and conflict issues 7%). Table 3 Rounded Percentages of the Gender of the Correspondent by Main Topic of the News Story Across All Countries Gender of Correspondent Not Given Male Female Both Total Main Topic of Story None 62 24 14 0 100 International Politics 61 31 7 1 100 International Economics/Trade 67 28 5 0 100 International military/Defense/conflict 64 28 7 1 100 International Aid/Development 57 34 9 0 100 Domestic Politics 59 31 9 1 100 Domestic Economics 70 25 5 0 100 Social Services/Problems/Education 64 25 11 0 100 Crime/Justice/Police 77 18 5 0 100 Cultural/Art/History/Performance/Review 49 34 15 2 100 Sport 70 27 3 0 100 Entertainment/Personalities 67 24 9 0 100 Oddities/Animals/Human Interest 79 16 3 2 100 Energy/Conservation/Environment 70 23 5 0 100 Natural/Disasters/Accident/Weather 84 12 4 0 100 Civil War/Domestic Conflict 71 24 4 1 100 Religion 68 25 5 2 100 Human Rights 58 34 8 0 100 Globalization/Internationalization 68 16 16 0 100 Migration/Immigration 62 32 6 0 100 Gender Issues 50 19 31 0 100 Ethnic Issues/identity/Politics/Assimilation 59 34 4 3 100 History/Historical Feature 100 0 0 0 100 Science/Technology 100 0 0 0 100 Other 54 35 10 4 100 SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS As we show, women are mostly absent from news broadcasts and news stories all over the world. By using the second dimension of agenda-setting, we argue that women are rarely presented as main actors in stories related to international issues or political or economic matters. Their absence from news broadcasts reflects their lack of participation in the public sphere, which means that their ability to be presented equally in the democratic process is low. We find that this gender gap typifies news broadcasts in both "Western" countries and "Patriarchal" countries. Our results draw attention to gender-specific divisions of labor and forms of power that have been established and reinforced by this dimension of the media's agenda. In addition, the low percentages of women portrayed as main actors in the news all over the world suggest that a major step towards democratic life would consist of broadening women's role in the public sphere. Differences in the appearance of female correspondents among countries can be explained partly by cultural reasons and economics factors. For example, in the United States of America, women's jobs in the network news depend on their salary demands, their age, and in some cases, their appearance (Lont, 1995). We also show that women reporters tend to cover women issues, which tend to be limited to the private sphere. Thus, the picture of women excluded from the public sphere is reproduced. A THEORETICAL MODEL Why is this type of research about women important? Because what we see, often, is what we believe, and that can be as powerful as "reality". There for the news picture of women may influence the abiltiy to enter the public sphere. Alfred Schutz was fascinated by what he regarded as the mysteries of everyday existence. Just how do we make sense of the world around us so that we structure and coordinate our daily actions? How can we do this with such ease that we do not even realize that we are doing it? Relying upon phenomenological notions, developed in Europe, Schutz asked his students at the New School for Social Research in New York to set aside their commonsense, taken-for-granted explanations of what they do in order to recognize that everyday life is actually much more complicated than they assumed. Schutz argued that we can conduct our lives with little effort or thought because we have developed stocks of social knowledge that we use to make sense of what goes on around us quickly and then structure our actions accordingly. One of the most important forms of knowledge that we process is "typifications", that enable us quickly to classify objects and actions that we have observed and then structure our own actions in response (Baran and Davis,1995). Schutz's ideas were elaborated in The Social Construction of Reality, written by sociologists Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann (1967). In explaining how reality is socially constructed, Berger and Luckmann assume that: "There is an ongoing correspondence between my meanings and their meanings in the world that we share a common sense about its reality" (p.23). In order to understand one another, people have to share symbols and their meaning. There is a correspondence among people when they share the same common sense about the reality of the object being symbolized; they have a common symbolic reality stemming from their shared understanding of the symbols they experience.. But Berger and Luckmann recognize that there is another kind of meaning that individuals, attach to things in their nearest environments, and that is subjective rather then objective. In fact, they identify three types of reality that interact dialectically: (1) The objective social reality that exists outside vis-a-vis the individual. People experience this reality as the objective world, which confront them as facts. They apprehend this reality in a common sense fashion as reality par excellence - as a reality that does not need further verification over and beyond its simple existence. Although human beings are capable of doubting this reality, they are obliged to suspend such doubt in order to perform the routine actions that ensure both their own existence and their interaction with others. (2) The symbolic reality, which arises from socially shared meaning based on any form of symbolic expression such as art, literature or media contents. 3) The subjective reality, where both objective and symbolic realities merge to serve as an impute for the construction of the individual's own subjective reality. Therefore, Berger and Luckmann define the process of reality-construction as a social process due to social interaction with either an objective or symbolic character. It is a dialectical process in which the individual simultaneously creates, and is a product of his social environment (Adoni and Mane, 1984; Baran and Davis, 1995). Although Berber and Luckmann's book made no mention of mass communication, with the explosion of interest in the media that accompanied the dramatic social and cultural changes of that turbulent decade, mass communication theorists soon identified the book's value for developing media theory (Baran and Davis, 1995).For example, this was developed in The Role of Israeli Television in Developing Attitudes of Jewish Adolescents toward Arabs and the Israeli-Arab Conflict (First, 1995. In our study of women in the news , we suggest that the second dimension of agenda-setting can be understood best as a process of reality construction, because its clarify the process that create the picture in the head of the individuals. Figure 1 suggests an integrative model of how we process information. SUMMARY Women are not yet there in the world's press - that is, they are not there much in frequency or quantity, and often then, they are associated more with the private than the public sphere. Agenda-setting research on the second dimension would suggest that this may be merely reinforcing stereotypes about women the world over. If so, social change is likely to be abrupt and rough. Women are not likely to win equality wearing white gloves. Although women have become part of some research agendas, they are not yet part of the public agenda. FIGURE 1 - RESEARCH MODEL THE ROLE OF NEWS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ATTITUDES Background Variables: Age, Gender, Ethnicity, Religiosity Political Attitudes; Frequency of Exposure and attitudes towards Media and International News Broadcasts (A) Subjective Reality Based on Perception of: Socio-Political Reality Symbolic Reality Objects-Women in News Objects-Women in News Attributes: Topic, Type of story, Prominence, Attributes: Topic, Type of story, Prominence, Type of event Type of event (B) Symbolic Reality News Contents Objects and Attributes References Adoni, H. and S. Mane. (1984). "Media and Social Construction of Reality: Towards an Integration of Theory and Research". Communication Research, 11: 324-340. Baran, S.J. and D. Davis. (1995). Mass Communication Theory: Foundation, Ferment and Future. Belmont California: Wadsworth Publishing Company. Berger, P. and I. Luckmann. (1967). The Social Construction of Reality. New York: Anchor. 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