On Balance
07 August 2015
Kia ora koutou, welcome to On Balance - the National Council of Women of New Zealand's weekly round-up of the latest gender equality news, research and events. Please share it with anyone you think might be interested and let them know they can subscribe here.
News from
around the country:
• Justice Minister Amy
Adams launched a discussion document which “takes a hard look at the way the law
prevents and responds to family violence”. The
document was welcomed by many organisations working in the
area, including White Ribbon andWomen’s Refuge. New Zealanders have
been invited by the Ministry of Justice to have their say on the
document.
• The pay difference between male and
female chartered accountants in New Zealand has grown to $45,000 and is “getting
worse”.
• Following claims that the Gloriavale Community Christian School
has a strict gender divide in subjects and steers girls
toward domestic roles within the community, the
Education Review Office is set to be questioned by the
Education and Science Select Committee on its assessment
that the school meets review requirements.
• In a
grading by Amnesty International on its performance on the
UN Security Council so far, New Zealand received a C- for championing
women’s rights.
• An Auckland woman admitted “pimping out” her young daughter to an
elderly neighbour regularly over the course of six
years.
• To mark World Breastfeeding Week (1-7
August), UNICEF New Zealand called for governments, employers and
families to support women to breastfeed their
infantsthrough paid parental leave, flexible and
supportive employment practices, and a national culture of
encouragement and acceptance of
breastfeeding.
Latest
research:
• About one in ten junior doctors reported
being sexually harassed in the workplace. Doctors who
responded to the survey said humiliating younger doctors was
considered a "rite of passage", and that abuse and sexual
harassment were "deeply ingrained" in the medical
community.
• Women had less than a third of speaking
parts in the most popular films from 2007 to 2014,
according to a new study that gives further evidence of
persistent inequality in Hollywood, on-screen and
off.
• Researchers found that the birth control pill can help reduce
women’s risk of developing cancer, even long after
they stop using it.
• Body shaming may actually be making women
sick, suggests a US study. It found that women who had
higher levels of body shame reported decreased self-rated
health and an increased number of infections since their
teenage years.
International
news:
• A government computer
glitch in Queensland, Australia has caused more than 600 cases of suspected
child sexual abuse to go unreported. It was revealed
that, since January, a coding error in a departmental
computer program had stopped some public school principals'
reports of suspected abuse from being received by
police.
• Sexism in the publishing industry is rife, as
highlighted by author Catherine Nichols when she decided to
submit her manuscript under the name “George”. She found
thatsubmitting her manuscript under a male
pseudonym brought her more than eight times the number of
responses she had received under her own name.
• A
teenage girl in the US has been left with horrific injuries after she was
attacked by catcallers.
• The UK Government has failed to ratify pan-European convention
protecting the rights of women and girls three years
after signing up to it and 12 months since it came into
force.
• Experts on gender violence in South Africa
have reported that the country’s crimes against women have
almost become a normal occurrence and only
received attention when they were exceptionally
gruesome. The unaltered attitudes towards violence and
crimes directed at women as well as a prevailing sense that
men could get away with crimes against their spouses were
believed to be the underlying problems leading to such
incidents.
• Ten young basketball players in the US
returned home feeling pretty low after their five-game
winning streak at a national tournament was cut short when
they were disqualified – all because one of their players is a
girl.
• The hashtag #ILookLikeAnEngineer went viral
on social media this week after platform engineer Isis Wenger was told
she did not look like an engineer when she appeared in an ad
that was part of her company OneLogin's recruiting
campaign. Thousands of engineers from underrepresented
groups used the #ILookLikeAnEngineer to recast how people
view them.
• In Canada, topless protesters marched to defend women's
rights to go bare-chested, after three sisters were
stopped for bicycling semi-nude.
• In Hong Kong,
hundreds of angry citizens – both men and women – took to the streets with their bras to fight
the arrest of a woman for assaulting a police officer with
her breast during a protest.
• Netflix announced
that it will grant unlimited leave to both mothers and
fathers with full pay within the first year after their
child's birth or adoption.
• The US Senate blocked an attempt by
Republicans to terminate federal funds for Planned
Parenthood. This follows on the intense scrutiny faced
by Planned Parenthood after an anti-abortion group released
a series of videos which allegedly show that
the non-profit group is making money off of the sale of
fetal tissue, a practice Planned Parenthood
denies.
• Barbara Walters, a trailblazer for women in
media, has opened up about the sexism she faced as a
young journalist working in television media, which she
describes as having been very much "a man's
world".
• The Australian Press Council found The
Courier Mail in breach of its standards following the
reporting of the death of young transgender woman Mayang
Prasetyo at the hands of her husband. It was found to
breach two principles: first, that factual material be
presented with reasonable fairness and balance; and second,
that causing offence, distress or prejudice should be
avoided - unless doing so is sufficiently in the public
interest.
ends