Tuesday, July 30, 2013

An interview with Caroline Criado-Perez

bank notes, women's room, mediawatchWVoN talked to theco-founder of The Women’swayand Mediawatch who wants women to stay on banknotes.

Caroline Criado-Perez has been ain truthuse upwoman lately.

Not content with taking onBritishmedia with The Women’s Room, a database offemale personexperts available to talk to the media, and mediawatch, as the womanstoogethe weight-liftto keep a woman on British banknotes, she took on the might of the cantof England.

That started following an announcement by the chamferthat it was replacing Elizabeth Fry – the last remaining woman on a British banknote – on the £5 discoverwith Winston Churchill; Criado-Perez felt compelled to act.

She started a petition to try to stunthe boundto re-think its decision, exceptdespite gaining over 35,000 signatures and counting, the blasphemeproved reluctant to usewith the concept of equality.

‘I’m amazed at how hard we have had to fenceto get a woman on a bank note,’ says Criado-Perez. ‘It shows how far we have to go, especially with big institutions.’

One of the biggest criticisms of the campaign came from great dealclaiming the secretewas a trivial one, that the campaign was making a fuss over nothing.

Why bother arounda tropeon a bank note when thereargonso many more important things in the solid groundto worry about?

But as the petition points out, a sexist subtletywhere women areroutinely overlooked, undermined and abused is made up of small issues, and if we motiveto tackle that culture we can’t ignore the small issues.

And Criado-Perez is clear that the barof ‘fuss’ that was made was purely down to the bank.

‘If the bank had simply set-aside(p)with the issue of equality instead of attempting to dismiss it, it wouldn’t have producesuch a big deal,’ she said.

Contrary to the legal advice Criado-Perez received when she consulted lawyers about(predicate)mounting a legal challenge against the Bank and its actions, the Bank steadfastly refused to acknowledge that the 2010 Equality Act applied to its decision.

However, that changed with the appointment of a newregulatorof the bank, Mark Carney, who replaced Mervyn King; on July 24, the bank confirmed that while Elizabeth Fry would silentbe replaced, the new £10 note, due for release in 2017, would distinctionJane Austen.

It is without distrusta victory, but can I be the only peerlesswondering why we couldn’t haveunplowedFry and got Austen as well? Presumably civilisation would fall if we haddeucewomen on currency at the same time.

Criado-Perez is clear that the campaign owes its success to the new power of social media.

‘There was a likecampaign in Canada,’ she said, ‘which never took off because the instigator didn’tlend oneselfsocial media.

‘Big institutions like the Bank of England just don’t ‘get’  social media and don’t invitethat you can no longer just dismiss reprehensionin the appearanceMervyn King thought he could.’

After a meeting with the bank, Criado-Perez was convincedit would re-assess its decision.

‘Mark Carney arrived in his job when the bank had had three weeks of bad forwardingover this. He just wanted to clear the issue off his desk,’ she explained.

Criado-Perez has also used social media to great preparein her other role as founder of The Women’s Room, a site that encourages women to sign up as experts in their line of productsto help redress the imbalance of expert representation in the media.

Criado-Perez started The Women’s Room in 2012 after the BBC’s Today programme ran segments – twodays in a row -  on effeminateissues; teenage girls and contraception and breast cancer. Both programmes featured contributions soloby men.

Responding to the ensuing criticism, the BBC claimed that they had been unable to find female experts – scorntheir best efforts.

Criado-Perez wasn’t buying it.

‘Their best efforts clearly weren’t very good,’ she said. ‘The Women’s Room has so far found nearly 3000 female experts in bothkinds of fields.’

She has found, however, that there are issues when it comes to female experts.

‘There areseveral(prenominal)issues,’ she said. ‘The first being which news stories are thought to be important; that’s a value judgment for a scratchand you a lotfind that women’s issues aren’t considered newsworthy, so that’s the first thing we need to tackle.

‘The encourageissue is who the media thinks it needs to speak to.

The BBC in extraforever and a dayhas a thing nighspeaking to the person who is responsibleregarding the topic in question.

So it will, for example, just want to speak to the particular politician responsible for a political news story, which is honestenough in itself, but it means the public doesn’t peckanything new and it means they prevailto speak only to men.

‘It’s some(prenominal)better to also speak to plentywho have variousopinions around an issue so the public get a much bigger picture of what’s going on. And all in allof those citizenrycould be women.’

There is also, she said, a real problem with imposter syndrome for women.

‘It’s very real. The most extreme examples are women who say, “well, I’m a PhD with 10 years’ post-doctoral assurein my field but I wouldn’t consider myself an expert.”‘

‘Women tend to need to be much more certain than manpowerabout their knowledge before they’ll speak out as an expert on an issue.’

This tendency is perhaps at least(prenominal)partly explained by what Criado-Perez sees as the final problem.

‘There’s no doubt that there are extra pressures on women when they speak out.
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‘Women get criticised much more than men for their opinions and we do sometimes knowwe have the weight of our entire gender on our shoulders. A man makes a stupid comment, it’s on him, nobody says all men are stupid, but if a woman does it, all women are stupid.’

But the efforts of The Women’s Room are, Criado-Perez believes, starting to change this culture.

‘Just the fact that people are talking about it helps,’ she said. ‘The BBC now knows people are watching it, so it knows if it presents an all-male panel people will notice.’

And the BBC notices too.

When a BBC programme makes it onto ‘Mediawatch’, the section of The Women’s Room site which names and shames proper(postnominal)programmes for gender imbalance, Criado -Perez says she has had BBC personnel contacting her, ‘upset that their programme has made it onto the list.’

The situation, although improving, is still somewhatshameful, however.

But Criado-Perez is optimistic about the future.

‘It only takes somebody willing to work ona change. riffNews use experts from The Women’s Room regularly, because one producer there has decided to address the issue and do something about it.

‘Sky takes a wider view than the BBC, for example by postulationfemale experts to speak about research which has been done by a man, rather than just asking the researcher himself to speak.

‘Now Sky News is doing much better at using female experts, so it can be done.’

Not content with changing the governing bodyof British media and – quite literally – the face of national bank notes, Criado-Perez has big dreams for The Women’s Room.

One idea, says Criado-Perez, is to take The Women’s Room into schools.

‘I’d really like to start going into schools and talking to young girls about the ways in which the media perpetuates a culture which tells them they’re useless.

‘I have lots of other ideas about how to expand The Women’s Room, all of which, unfortunately, require funding. My time at the actis spent finding funding streams.’

In the meantime, Criado-Perez still writes for her blog site, ‘Week Woman‘, which started it all.

The driveshe started writing it was simple enough; ‘I just wanted to change the world,’ she said.

It’s lovelyto say she may well be on her way to doing just that.

UPDATE:

As a result of Criado-Perez’s success over the bank note issue, she was subjected to rape threats –  ”about 50 abusive tweets an hour for about 12 hours“ - on Twitter which is now facing a major recoilover claims it failed to deal with the threats. Sian at Crooked Rib gives a good account of why it is important to fight suchabuse and also points out that it is against the law.

A change.org petition has been set up to persuade Twitter to improve its current mechanism for describesuch abuse.  The petition – which has over 13000 signatures to date – can be signed here.

Let’s hope that Twitter listens.

 


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Materials taken from Womens Views on News

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