|
Back to Index
WiPSU Media Monitoring Report (July-September 2006)
Women
in Politics Support Unit (WiPSU)
November 16, 2006
Download
this document
- Acrobat
PDF version (236KB)
If you do not have the free Acrobat reader on
your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking
here.
Introduction
The media plays a significant role in determining how women in politics
and decision- making are viewed and perceived by society in general.
The media does not only play an important role in shaping the values
of society but also reflects those values. The media is a chronicler
of events, an informer, an educator, a Transformative space and
a tool for positive social change. It has the capacity to make a
very positive contribution towards social change.
In order to
conduct a systematic analysis of how women are covered in the media,
Women in Politics Support Unit, WiPSU, initiated an internal data
capturing process where a daily monitoring of newspapers would be
conducted and any article on women Parliamentarians and councilors
would be collected. The articles are analyzed to give an overview
of how women are portrayed and the implications of that portrayal
on women and women's issues in Zimbabwe.
There
cannot be a real democracy if the voices and issues of 52% of the
country's population are ignored or sidelined. This media analysis
will assist in determining whether or not women's voices and issues
are articulated to the public as matters of importance. It can also
be used as a basis for assessing what could be done to ensure that
woman's voices and women's issues are regarded as important.
Scope
of this analysis
The media monitoring initiative covered the local daily and weekly
newspapers from both the independent and state media. The newspapers
are the Herald, the Daily News, the Daily Mirror, the Sunday Mail,
the Weekly Standard, The Independent and The Financial Gazette.
The variety of papers would make it possible to analyze the coverage
from a comprehensive perspective. Great care and effort were taken
to ensure that the margin of error is negligible. This analysis
covered the period July to September 2006.
In order for
a report to qualify it has to have reference to a particular woman
in elected public office. This means a woman Parliamentarian or
Councilor. It would not be adequate for an article to merely refer
to Parliamentarians or Councilors without linking it to a particular
woman or women specifically. An article covering a woman in her
capacity as Minister or Governor would qualify because in the current
Constitutional framework, Ministers and Governors are members of
Parliament. In some cases women Ministers are in fact elected parliamentarians.
Download
full document
Visit the WiPSU fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|