Same threats, different platforms? Female journalists’ experiences of online gender-based violence in selected newsrooms in Namibia

Itai Zviyita, Admire Mare
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Concerns about the disproportionate levels of online gender-based abuse experienced by female journalists when compared to their male counterparts have attracted sizeable scholarly attention in the last few years. Extant studies have highlighted that female journalists experience online forms of harassment such as name calling, body shaming, trolling, verbal abuse, sextortion, non-consensual sharing of intimate images, manipulation of photos, cyberstalking, doxing, hacking, receiving unwanted, offensive sexually explicit emails or messages, and inappropriate advances on social media platforms, in the line of duty. Although these findings are true in some of the newsrooms in the global North, there is a disconcerting absence of systematic studies looking at the experiences of female journalists in selected newsrooms in Africa in general and Namibia in particular. This article seeks to fill this lacuna by empirically investigating the extent to which online gender-based violence is deep-seated social problem in selected Namibian newsrooms. It deploys the intersectional approach to analyze the online gender-based violence experienced by female journalists in Namibia. Drawing our data from interviews with female journalists in selected Namibian newsrooms, overall, our findings suggest that cases of online gender-based violence against female journalists are still negligible when compared to other contexts, it is happening, nonetheless. This emerging phenomenon is largely underreported. Furthermore, it is occurring in an environment devoid of legislative, institutional, and newsroom-specific mechanisms aimed at ensuring the safety of female journalists. Namibian female journalists are facing unique online gender-based violence, which contributes immensely towards self-censorship and retreating from the public sphere.
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同样的威胁,不同的平台?纳米比亚部分新闻编辑室中女性记者遭遇网络性别暴力的经历
与男性记者相比,女性记者在网络上遭受的基于性别的虐待程度过高,这一担忧在过去几年里引起了相当大的学术关注。现有的研究强调,女记者在工作中经历了各种形式的网络骚扰,如辱骂、身体羞辱、网络挑衅、言语虐待、性勒索、未经同意分享亲密图像、篡改照片、网络跟踪、跟踪、黑客攻击、接收不想要的、冒犯性的色情电子邮件或信息,以及在社交媒体平台上进行不适当的挑逗。虽然这些发现在全球北方的一些新闻编辑室是正确的,但令人不安的是,缺乏对非洲特别是纳米比亚某些新闻编辑室女记者经历的系统研究。本文试图填补这一空白,通过实证调查的程度,网络性别暴力是根深蒂固的社会问题,在纳米比亚选定的新闻编辑室。它采用交叉方法来分析纳米比亚女记者所经历的基于性别的网络暴力。根据我们对纳米比亚新闻编辑室的女记者的采访数据,我们的研究结果表明,与其他情况相比,针对女记者的网络性别暴力案件仍然可以忽略不计,尽管如此,这种情况仍在发生。这一新兴现象在很大程度上被低估了。此外,这是在缺乏旨在确保女记者安全的立法、体制和新闻编辑室机制的环境中发生的。纳米比亚女记者面临独特的网络性别暴力,这极大地促成了自我审查和退出公共领域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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