New research confirms that journalists who are pregnant or mothers are fighting against some of the same injustices that women reporters faced decades ago.
The news media has little love for women in the prime of their lives
Online trolling, harassment, and hate campaigns targeting female journalists persist all over the world.
Tributes to Latina journalists should not glaze over the harsh truths about the racism and misogyny they faced.
Women journalists are significantly more likely than men to be targeted for online threats and harassment, and it's having an impact on how they do their jobs.
Elsie Robinson was once the most famous American newspaper writer, but she, along with many other notable women, has been all but forgotten.
Sculptor Amanda Matthews created the Girl Puzzle monument honoring Bly and dedicated to women whose histories are absent in public art.
A recent WMC-hosted panel on the legacy of U.S. violence is a deep resource for all those covering and writing about the southern border and immigration policy.
Supporters of the ruling party have instigated threats and violence in an effort to silence women journalists.
Wade, an acclaimed editor, longtime activist and mentor, and the lead plaintiff in a historic sex discrimination lawsuit against the New York Times, died last week.
Latinx journalists will continue to be left out if we don't change our tactics
Reporters are experiencing trauma from covering ICE’s treatment of immigrants. But who's talking about it?
Colleagues are vowing to continue the work of the courageous journalist, who died recently at 46.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security plans to monitor hundreds of thousands of news sources around the world and build a database that it enables it to track and search journalists, editors, and “media influencers” based on their beat and past work.
The commission found that lack of representation fueled media stereotypes and distortions. Half a century later, those stereotypes persist.
Choosing journalism as a profession in Syria in the late 1990s was almost as unusual for a young girl as choosing to become a professional soccer player. “There were a lot of women studying media, but we already knew that we [would] not work as journalists,” said Rula Asad.















