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Sex Discrimination in Korean Newspapers
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Sex Discrimination in Korean Newspapers
i
The actual numbers from the ASNE 2001 Minority Report are: 34.4 percent of supervisor positions, 41.2
percent of copy/layout editors, 39.9 percent of reporters and 26.5 of photographers.
ii
The Newspaper and Broadcasting Journal noted 10.1 percent for 1999, a 1.1 percent difference from the
Korean Women Journalists Club data. The numbers are based on women working in newspaper, broadcast and wire organizations.G
iii
The population of 259 represents all of women journalists working for the 10 national newspapers—
Chosun-Ilbo, Danhan Mail, DongA-Ilbo, Hankook-Ilbo, Hankyerae-Shinmun, Joongang-Ilbo, Kookmin-Ilbo, Kyunghyang-Shinmun, Munhwa-Ilbo and Saegye-Ilbo—and the three business newspapers—Hankook-Kyungjae, Mail-Kyungjae and Seoul-Kyungjae. Each newspaper has 150 to 250 reporters and editors in the newsroom.
G
iv
In this study local papers are excluded because, unlike United States, usually only local government and
some local businesses, not many people, subscribe to local papers in Korea. In general, the media power and influence is concentrated on the national newspapers and three economic dailies in Korea, and most of Koreans read these papers instead of local papers.
v
Soft news departments were defined as culture and living/style departments, and hard news
departments were defined as business, politics, metro/city, international and technology/science.
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| | Authors: Cho, Sooyoung. and Davenport, Lucinda. |
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Sex Discrimination in Korean Newspapers
i
The actual numbers from the ASNE 2001 Minority Report are: 34.4 percent of supervisor positions, 41.2
percent of copy/layout editors, 39.9 percent of reporters and 26.5 of photographers.
ii
The Newspaper and Broadcasting Journal noted 10.1 percent for 1999, a 1.1 percent difference from the
Korean Women Journalists Club data. The numbers are based on women working in newspaper, broadcast and wire organizations.G
iii
The population of 259 represents all of women journalists working for the 10 national newspapers—
Chosun-Ilbo, Danhan Mail, DongA-Ilbo, Hankook-Ilbo, Hankyerae-Shinmun, Joongang-Ilbo, Kookmin- Ilbo, Kyunghyang-Shinmun, Munhwa-Ilbo and Saegye-Ilbo—and the three business newspapers— Hankook-Kyungjae, Mail-Kyungjae and Seoul-Kyungjae. Each newspaper has 150 to 250 reporters and editors in the newsroom.
G
iv
In this study local papers are excluded because, unlike United States, usually only local government and
some local businesses, not many people, subscribe to local papers in Korea. In general, the media power and influence is concentrated on the national newspapers and three economic dailies in Korea, and most of Koreans read these papers instead of local papers.
v
Soft news departments were defined as culture and living/style departments, and hard news
departments were defined as business, politics, metro/city, international and technology/science.
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