- Acknowledges and surveys the role journalism plays in shining a light on social injustices and critiques research deficits in reporting on sexual violence mainly in the Global North.
- Collaborated with 154 journalism scholars from Australia, the USA, the UK the USA, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Israel, Japan and India.
- Employs cutting-edge research linked to an intersectional lens to amplify the voices that have been silenced in the media coverage.
- Explores how advocacy, campaign, solutions and constructive journalism offers frameworks for ethical reporting on the shadow epidemic of sexual violence during these COVID-normal times.
Reviews
Demands to improve the quality of news reporting on sexual violence have acquired even greater urgency in the wake of diverse #MeToo movements. This edited collection represents an important intervention, bringing to bear the perceptive insights and analyses of its impressive international contributors, while also inspiring fresh thinking about progressive ways forward. Highly recommended for students, researchers, journalists and activists alike.
Stuart Allan, Professor of Journalism, School of Journalism, Media and Culture, Cardiff University, UK
This volume addresses one of the most important social issues of our times. Reporting gendered violence accurately is a key task of survivors, journalists, social movements, and governments alike. This pioneering volume is as thorough as it is international as it is damning, in terms of the impact of hegemonic masculinity, from violence itself to how it is understood.
Toby Miller, Stuart Hall Profesor de Estudios Culturales, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, México
This collection offers a timely consideration of hashtag journalism, spanning a range of contexts to untangle the relationships between online disclosure, activism and journalistic practices. Incorporating original empirical research with journalists, discussions of newsroom culture and analyses of news texts, it is an important contribution to Journalism Studies.
Karen Boyle, Professor of Feminist Media Studies, University of Strathclyde, UK
The #MeToo movement exposed a multitude of flaws in traditional journalism. Using diverse methodologies and robust scholarship, this book examines how, and to what extent, reporting on sexual violence evolved in the wake of this global phenomenon. The contributors make a compelling case for the need to reimagine the role of journalism as one which not only reflects society, but makes it better. This is a must-read for every journalist who wants to progress the profession.
Tracey Spicer AM, Walkley Award winning journalist, inaugural national convenor of Women in Media (Australia), joint 2019 Sydney Peace Prize recipient (alongside Tarana Burke) for the #MeToo movement.
Baker, A. & Manchanda Rodrigues, U. (eds.). (2022). Reporting on Sexual Violence in the #MeToo era, London: Routledge, pp.1-224.