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Public Notice
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Ottawa, 22 December 1986 |
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Public Notice CRTC 1986-351 |
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Policy on Sex-Role Stereotyping in the Broadcast Media
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Table of Contents |
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I. Introduction |
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A. BACKGROUND |
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B. HIGHLIGHTS OF RESPONSES TO THE TASK FORCE |
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C. STUDIES UNDERTAKEN DURING THE SELF-REGULATORY PERIOD |
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II. THE PUBLIC HEARINGS |
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A.VIEWS EXPRESSED AT THE HEARINGS
Effectiveness of Self-regulation Industry Guidelines
The Educational Process
Industry Committees and the CBC
Complaint Mechanisms
Recommendations by area |
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B. INDUSTRY COMMITMENTS MADE AT HEARINGS
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
Canadian Association of Broadcasters on behalf of its members
Canadian Advertising Foundation
Association of Canadian Advertisers
CTV Television Network |
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III. COMMISSION FINDINGS |
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The Role of Canadian Broadcasters
Expectations from the Self-Regulatory Period
The Guidelines
The Industry Committees and Station Reports
The Complaint Mechanism
Industry and Public Awareness
Public Hearing Submissions
ERIN Research Findings |
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IV. CONCLUSION |
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Commission Expectations and
Recommendations
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
The Canadian Association of Broadcasters
The Canadian Advertising Foundation
The Public
The Government
Condition of Licence |
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POST-HEARING INDUSTRY COMMITMENTS AND COMMISSION REMARKS |
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Appendix A: CAB, AAB and CBC Guidelines on Sex-Role
Stereotyping |
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Appendix B: Recommendations of the Task Force on Sex-Role
Stereotyping as published in Images of Women |
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I. INTRODUCTION
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A. BACKGROUND
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In 1979 the government developed a national action
plan,Towards Equality for Women, to promote the equality of women in Canadian
society and eliminate the discrimination they had traditionally faced.
Following the publication of this report, her Excellency the Right Honourable
Jeanne Sauvé, then Minister of Communications, wrote to the CRTC indicating
that Cabinet considered the Commission to be the agency that could "most
appropriately take steps to see that guidelines and standards to encourage
the elimination of sex-role stereotyping from the media it regulates are
formulated by 1980." |
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This mandate was reiterated later in 1979 by the next
Minister of Communications, the Honourable David MacDonald, who cautioned
that with nearly 50% of all women now in the workforce, the media have the
duty to reflect the role of women accurately. In requesting the CRTC to set
up a Task Force on this issue, he stated that its mandate should be "to
delineate guidelines for a more positive (and realistic) portrayal of women
in radio and television (in both programming and commercials) and to make
policy recommendations for consideration by the Commission and the broadcast
industry." |
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Four successive federal governments have supported the
Commission's activities in this regard. Moreover, the federal government has
continued to support the provision of equality for men and women in Canada,
as demonstrated by the incorporation of this provision in the Charter of
Rights and Freedoms and the recent passage of Bill C-62, which deals with
employment equity. More recently, in April 1986, the Honourable Walter
Mclean, then Minister of State responsible for the Canadian Advisory Council
on the Status of Women, reconfirmed the federal government's commitment to
the Commission's efforts in ensuring that the broadcast media portray women
as equal and active participants in our society. |
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In response to the government initiatives the CRTC, on 28
September 1979, announced the formation of a Task Force "to develop
guidelines to encourage the elimination of sex-role stereotyping in the
broadcast media." Chaired by Commissioner Marianne Barrie, the Task Force was
composed of nineteen people from the CRTC, the public across Canada, the CBC,
the private broadcast media and the advertising industry. Two representatives
from the Canadian Advisory Council on the Status of Women also served as
ex-officio members during their tenure as officers of the Council. |
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In October 1979, at its first meeting, the Task Force agreed,
while recognizing that other forms of stereotyping exist in broadcasting,
that it would concentrate on the sex-role stereotyping (SRS) of women. It
agreed to address the issue as a problem of injustice and inequality, rather
than as one of "poor taste," and that, as a priority, it would study
commercials before examining programs. The Task Force also decided to focus
on the joint issues of women's presentation and representation within the
Canadian broadcasting system, rather than on their employment in the
industry. |
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The Task Force announced that it would hold six regional
public meetings to hear comments from interested parties (Public Notice CRTC
1980-14 dated 25 January 1980). Over 50 individuals, many representing large
constituencies, made presentations. The public's written views on this matter
were also solicited, and altogether 124 submissions were received, ranging
from letters to several major research briefs. |
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Following its deliberations on presentations made at the
hearings and further working sessions, the Task Force published its report in
September 1982. This report contained some 20 recommendations to improve the
portrayal of women in Canadian broadcasting (Images of Women, pp. 64-71)
(Appendix B). In particular, a two-year period of self-regulation for both
the broadcast media and advertising industry was recommended, following which
the effectiveness of self-regulation would be assessed in a framework of
public accountability. |
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It was also recommended that the CRTC assess the initiatives
taken over the two-year period by periodically monitoring commercials and
programs for sex-role stereotyping; requesting and assessing reports from
industry committees responsible for self-regulation; assessing complaints
received; and at the end of two years, publishing the results of its findings
and creating an appropriate public forum for its discussion prior to the
consideration of further action by the Commission. |
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In addition, the Task Force recommended that the CRTC require
all broadcast licensees to submit periodic reports to the Commission on their
progress and initiatives in dealing with the problem of sex-role
stereotyping; to take initiatives to eliminate abusive comments on, or
abusive pictorial representation of, either sex in all broadcast content; and
to discourage the portrayal of gratuitous violence against women. |
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The Task Force also recommended that the CBC ensure that its
staff adhere to the Corporation's policies and guidelines on this issue. The
CBC was also asked to conduct comparative studies of the portrayal of women
on both the English and French-language services, and to make the results of
these studies available to the public. Further, the Task Force recommended
that the CBC consider those it employs on a contract basis in any future
studies on women and employment. |
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Several recommendations were addressed to the Canadian
Association of Broadcasters (CAB), as well as to all private broadcasters. |
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Along with recommending that the CAB adopt proposed changes
to its Code of Ethics as Association policy, the Task Force also recommended
that the mandate of the CAB's Standing Committee on Sex-Role Stereotyping
should include, among other things, education of its members on the issue of
stereotyping, the handling of complaints and the publication of interim
reports. As well, it was suggested that all CAB-member broadcasters
participate in the implementation of the Association's proposal for
self-regulation, and cooperate in making it effective. Members were also
encouraged to increase the visibility of women both on- and off-air and
exercise awareness of sex-role stereotyping in acquiring programming material
or rights. |
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Recommendations to the advertising industry included
encouraging its members to participate in the implementation of the
industry's proposal of self-regulation; as well as to reviewing and, where
appropriate, modifying its codes concerning the portrayal of individuals
(particularly women) in advertising. |
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Finally, the Task Force urged the public to continue to voice
its concerns and complaints about what it finds objectionable in broadcast
programming and commercials. |
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The Commission, in Public Notice CRTC 1982-126 dated 4
November 1982, announced the formation of a committee to draw up a plan of
action for the implementation of the Task Force recommendations. Chaired by
Commissioner Rosalie Gower, the committee consisted of both CRTC
commissioners and staff. Less than one year later, the Commission, in Public
Notice CRTC 1983-211 dated 16 September 1983, notified licensees that, "by 1
September 1984, they will be required to submit a report on the initiatives
they have taken," and in particular, on their complaint mechanisms and
educational measures to sensitize staff. This deadline for submission was
extended twice. |
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In November 1984, the Commission announced that it had
enacted amendments to its Radio and Television Broadcasting Regulations
prohibiting "any abusive comment that, when taken in context, tends or is
likely to expose an individual or a group or class of individuals to hatred
or contempt on the basis of race, national or ethnic origin, colour,
religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability." A similar prohibition
was incorporated into the Regulations Respecting Pay Television Broadcasting
Undertakings. |
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The Commission also stated at that time that it would issue a
publication including the reports received from the advertising and private
broadcasting industries, and the CBC, on the measures they took during the
two-year period to deal with sex-role stereotyping, as well as a summary of
public response over the two-year period. The CRTC further announced that it
had commissioned Erin Research Inc. (ERIN) to conduct an analysis of program
content to help assess the degree to which broadcasters and advertisers were
adhering to their respective industry guidelines (see Appendix A), a summary
of which was included in the above publication. This study was partly funded
by the Department of Communications (DOC). |
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B. HIGHLIGHTS OF RESPONSES TO THE TASK FORCE
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The responses to the Task Force recommendations by the
broadcasters and advertising associations during the two-year period of
self-regulation are highlighted below and are outlined further in the section
covering the public hearing proceedings on this issue. |
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The CBC responded by distributing its 1979 inclusive-language
guidelines to about 600 key personnel across the country in January 1983,
through the Office of the Coordinator, Portrayal of Women, which was
established in 1979. In addition, four comparative content analyses were
conducted for the Corporation for the years 1981-84. The complete 1981
analysis was published, and summaries of the others were included in the
Corporation's report to the Commission. Complete analyses from 1982-84,
however, neither are available to the general public, nor were they made
available to the CRTC for public use. The CBC's summary report did not deal
with its in-house hiring or promotion of its women employees, and did not
deal with those hired on a contract basis. |
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The CBC's Office of the Coordinator, Portrayal of Women,
initiated a number of activities, including meetings with key personnel in
the regions and participation in seminars and conferences on the portrayal of
women. According to the Office, women's representation on CBC committees
increased, as did the visibility of women in some CBC programming. |
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In October 1982 the CAB's Board of Directors established a
Standing Committee on Sex-Role Stereotyping for both French and English
media. It also adopted changes to its Code of Ethics in November 1982. In
1985 the Standing Committee was disbanded and its function taken over by the
CAB's new Societal Issues Committee, whose scope includes issues such as
violence, children's programming, native broadcasting, closed captioning for
the hearing-impaired and pornographic lyrics. As well, it overviews the CAB
sex-role stereotyping complaints procedure. |
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During its tenure, the CAB's Standing Committee on Sex-Role
Stereotyping distributed the Task Force's recommendations and the industry
guidelines to all private broadcasters. The Committee also passed on any
comments received on sex-role stereotyping to the individual stations
involved, urging them to respond directly to any complaints. The Committee
submitted summary reports to the Commission and five full reports on its
complete activities to the CAB Board of Directors: these latter, however,
remain confidential. According to its summary report, the CAB's standing
committee sent five letters to its members, held 12 seminars and made two
presentations to its members during the two-year period of industry
self-regulation. |
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The Commission also received a number of responses to its
Public Notice CRTC 1983-211 addressed to individual broadcasters. For the
purpose of its English and French radio and television station response
analysis, the Commission considered only those stations which broadcast 42
hours or more of programming per week. This meant that as of 15 December
1984, 566 stations could have responded. By 31 January 1985, 376
(approximately 66%) of these 566 eligible stations had submitted reports on
measures taken to deal with the problem of sex-role stereotyping. Of the
stations eligible to respond, 274 were members of the CAB; 238 of these (87%)
filed a report with the Commission. The overall radio response rate was 64%,
the overall AM, 66%, and the overall FM, 61%. The overall television station
response rate was 83%. |
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The reports were analyzed to determine the specific actions
stations had taken to deal with sex-role stereotyping. The Commission notes
that 27% of all eligible stations, and 39% of the CAB member stations,
explicitly endorsed the CAB guidelines (although some CAB members may have
considered that their endorsement was evident to the Commission by virtue of
their CAB membership). |
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Analysis of the stations' responses found that 4% (all of
them CAB members) had established guidelines concerning stereotyping either
for purchased programming or for commercials' acceptability; 14% of all
reporting stations established such guidelines for programs they produced and
22% developed guidelines for commercials they produced. |
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Many stations established committees and some initiated
measures to deal with complaints. Some monitored song lyrics, and some said
they tried to maintain, as much as possible, a balance between male and
female performers. The increased on-air use of women was cited by almost half
of the responding stations as a means to combat stereotyping. |
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The reports received from Access Alberta, TVOntario, and
Vancouver Co-operative Radio indicate that since their inception they have
all taken active steps to deal with the issue of sex-role stereotyping and
have attempted, through their programming policies, to avoid it. |
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The Commission notes that in all, 40 stations (11% of the
responding total) indicated that they had removed or rejected commercials
considered to be stereotypical. One station reported that it had removed a
program found to be stereotypical. Since November 1981, the Canadian
Advertising Foundation (CAF) has been responsible for matters of policy and
funding of the Advertising Advisory Board (AAB) and the Advertising Standards
Council (ASC), along with their French-language equivalents, La Confédération
générale de la publicité (COGEP) and le Conseil des normes de la publicité. |
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The AAB formed an Advisory Committee on Sex-Role Stereotyping
in 1982. It promoted a $70,000 film, "Women say the Dardnest Things", which
details the manner in which stereotyping occurs; the reasons it is found to
be objectionable; and appropriate methods to deal with sex-role stereotyping
when it occurs. The film was written and produced at cost by volunteers from
the advertising industry. The Committee also distributed a bibliography of
literature about sex-role stereotyping in advertising. It handled complaints
about broadcast commercials by forwarding these comments to the advertisers
involved; one-third of such complaints alleged contraventions of the AAB
guidelines. In March 1985, this Committee was replaced by the Advisory Panel
on Sex-Role Stereotyping, directly responsible for continuing industry
education and handling of complaints, and a separate Committee on Sexuality
and Violence in Canadian Advertising was formed to study these issues and
their implications. |
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COGEP, in a report submitted to the CRTC in 1983, submitted
additional comments outlining activities complementary to those of the AAB.
It reported a declining number of complaints both in print and broadcast
media over a four-year period, and a very successful cooperative effort
between it and the Conseil du statut de la femme du Québec. |
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As well, the public voiced its concerns about sex-role
stereotyping in programming and commercials. Approximately 550 written
comments were received from 1 September 1982 until 1 April 1985 and the
Commission notes that 87% concerned television and 13% radio in commercials
and programming respectively. Altogether it appears that about 1,600 comments
about sex-role stereotyping were received by the industry committees and the
CRTC; but whether or not some duplication of letters occurred is not known. |
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The public members of the original Task Force also submitted
a brief report at the end of the two-year self-regulatory period endorsing
the study done by MediaWatch (see the following section) and concluding that
"... the overall look is still pretty bleak ...[self-regulation] has not, by
and large, worked." |
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C. STUDIES UNDERTAKEN DURING THE SELF-REGULATORY PERIOD
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Content analyses were performed during the self-regulatory
period by the CRTC, through Erin Research Inc. (ERIN), and by the CBC and
MediaWatch. |
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The CRTC in 1984 commissioned the very comprehensive ERIN
Research study (Note 1) to measure the sex-role portrayal (rather than the
sex-role stereotyping) of women and men on the Canadian broadcasting system.
ERIN Research analyzed 1,494 hours of programming and 3,342 commercials
sampled from English- and French-language public and private stations, AM and
FM radio and TV, all of which were members of the CAB. |
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Taping of the broadcasts for coding purposes took place over
a three-week period, between the end of September and the middle of October
1984. All television, and most radio taping, was done by the Commission;
commercials were sampled in proportion to the number of commercials broadcast
by the individual stations. |
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The terms under which ERIN Research was to proceed with its
study were first, that the research would be based on the CAB and AAB
guidelines; second, that its report would not measure sex-role stereotyping
broadcast by Canadian media, but would instead measure the actual way in
which men and women are presented by Canadian broadcasters and advertisers --
sex-role portrayal; third, it was also understood that the Commission, not
ERIN Research, would make the final determination whether or not the industry
guidelines had been met. No comparisons were to be made between radio and
television, between French and English broadcasters, or between private and
public broadcasters where the comparison could result in the explicit
identification of the private broadcaster. As well, no single station or
network was to be reported on individually. The study was to be a snapshot of
the Canadian broadcasting system at one point in time, not a comparative
analysis. ERIN Research summarized its findings as follows (for full report,
see chapter 9 of the CRTC's Sex-Role Stereotyping in the Broadcast Media: A
Report on Industry Self-Regulation): |
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Three general points emerge from ERIN's data. First, there
are fewer women than men in almost all areas of Canadian broadcasting --
television and radio, programming and advertising. Second, the roles of women
and men differ in all areas; the differences are larger in some areas and
smaller in others. Third, the numerical presence of women and men in
broadcast material is linked to the roles that they occupy in a complex way.
Although presence and role are linked, a strategy to balance the portrayal of
the sexes would have to address each of these issues separately. |
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The CBC commissioned four content analyses of "prime-time"
network television in a four-year period. In 1981, the types of programs
analysed were information, drama and variety; in 1982, information; in 1983,
drama; and in 1984, information and variety. Its conclusions on the portrayal
of women and men during prime-time on the English television network of the
CBC for 1981-1984 are summarized as follows (for full analysis, see chapter 3
of Sex-Role Stereotyping in the Broadcast Media cited above): |
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While signs of sexism are not too frequent in the programs
studied, stereotypic representations are still numerous. For example, the
predominance of the male presence over the female presence is evident in the
three types of content studied. Women and men are generally portrayed in
conventional roles. Women are rather absent from the political and economical
scenes not only as newsmakers but also as experts or reporters. In addition,
these images are quite stable in all of the follow-up analyses. |
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The results of the analysis of the portrayal of women in
prime-time programming of the English network indicate the fading out of the
most discredited aspects of the image of women. However, the representation
of innovative images of men and women is still to be developed. |
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The study of the portrayal of women and men during prime-time
on the French television network of the CBC from 1981 to 1984 is summarized
as follows: |
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What choice does the loyal French network audience have
therefore among the characters appearing during prime-time? Dramas produced
by the French network constitute the program category in which the
quantitative portrayal of male and female characters is most nearly equal.
The audience may see some characters who do not conform to known stereotypes.
However, many stereotypes are reinforced, especially in the working world.
Acquisitions present a much smaller proportion of female characters than do
Canadian dramas. In addition, the characters in foreign productions are more
conventional than those in in-house productions. |
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The information audience has a much harder time keping
company with women than does the drama audience. Furthermore, the presence of
women seems to be linked to the presentation of certain non-political or
non-economic topics. While the actual presence of women in political circles
and the business world is a partial explanation of the imbalance in favour of
men, it does not adequately account for the number of women experts
interviewed or reporters. Nevertheless, few sexist remarks are to be noted
among reporters and anchors/newsreaders. The use of generic terms, with no
reference to gender, is therefore a fairly closely followed rule. |
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MediaWatch, which received financial assistance from the
Secretary of State, was created in 1981 as a subcommittee of the National
Action Committee of the Status of Women, and became an independent, national
autonomous organization in 1983. It conducted a broad comparative study on
the problem of sexism in Canadian radio and television programming and
advertising in the spring and again in the fall of 1984. Professionally
designed, the study used volunteers across Canada to gather its material. Its
report, which was endorsed by the original public members of the CRTC Task
Force on Sex-Role Stereotyping, was presented to the Commission in 1985.
MediaWatch analyzed its results by determining whether any differences were
found between the portrayal of men and women. Slight, moderate and large
inequities were used to assess each industry guideline. It concluded that,
since only one indicator (the use of sexist language in news, public affairs
and information programs) showed unequivocal improvement during the two-year
period, self-regulation had been ineffective in dealing with sex-role
stereotyping. For example, in the fall of 1984, 49% of major characters in
drama were women, while 24% of news anchors and 18% of interviewees were
women. Subsequently, MediaWatch also presented a comparative analysis between
ERIN, MediaWatch and the CBC's studies, emphasizing that, in its opinion, the
similarity of findings between its own research and the other two studies was
the important point. |
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II. THE PUBLIC HEARINGS
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In January 1986, the CRTC released Sex-Role Stereotyping in
the Broadcast Media. This publication included a CRTC report on actions taken
during the self-regulatory period and summary reports from the following: the
CBC, CAB, AAB and COGEP, as well as a summary of public comments received
over the two-year period and a summary of the findings of the independent
analysis conducted by ERIN. The Commission invited all interested parties to
submit their views as to the effectiveness of industry self-regulation, and
also announced the scheduling of public hearings during the month of April
1986 in Vancouver, Montreal, and the National Capital Region, to determine
the effectiveness of self-regulation over the two-year assessment period. |
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Following this announcement, the Commission received 87
written submissions, as follows: 16 from the general public, 18 from
interested organizations, 8 from individual stations, 6 from industry
associations and 15 from different interest groups. Of those who made
submissions, 33 appeared before the Commission during the hearings. The CAB
participated actively at all three hearings; representatives of the
advertising industry and MediaWatch also made oral presentations at all of
the three; and the CBC appeared at the National Capital Region hearing. |
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A. VIEWS EXPRESSED AT THE HEARINGS
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It became clear during the hearings, and from the written
submissions, that most of the concerns expressed were directed at two aspects
of self-regulation: the way in which self-regulation was supposed to
function, that is, the process of industry self-regulation and the actual
results from the whole period of self-regulation. |
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Effectiveness of self-regulation: It was evident from the
submissions received that there was a divergence of expectations regarding
the purpose of the self-regulatory period. While some members of the public
thought that self-regulation had been established to eliminate sex-role
stereotyping in Canadian broadcasting, others expected self-regulation to
reduce it. The broadcasters and advertisers, for their part, believed that
the first step in self-regulation was to educate and sensitize the industry
to the problem, gradually changing attitudes and thus eventually improving
women's portrayal in Canadian broadcasting. |
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Essentially, there was a consensus of opinion expressed at
the hearings from the public, non-industry associations and government
organizations, that the goals of self-regulation, as they perceived them, had
not been achieved during the two-year period. The majority stated that
self-regulation had not succeeded either in completely eliminating or
significantly reducing the stereotypical portrayal of women in Canadian
broadcasting. The following quotation from the National Action Committee on
the Status of Women sums up this view: |
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This then is the situation, not only after two years of
self-regulation but also after the two year period in which the task force on
sex-role stereotyping met. In fact, at least eight years have passed in which
both broadcasters and advertisers were aware of women's dissatisfaction with
their portrayal in broadcasting. Yet the ERIN study shows what women know,
that voluntary initiatives by a male-dominated industry have effected little
significant progress. |
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The broadcasting and advertising industries, on the other
hand, thought that self-regulation had been effective, if only to the extent
of "sensitizing" those involved to the existence of the issue. They
considered this to be the most important first step to generate momentum for
changing what appears on Canadian television or is heard on radio. In its
brief, the CAF stated: |
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We promised change, we promised to go to work on the problems, we've
promised improvements. We firmly believe that we have lived up to that set
of promises...
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Opinions differed strongly as to whether broadcasters and
advertisers should reflect society as it is or as it should be. Broadcasters
generally maintained that they should not be held solely responsible for
reforming attitudes and behaviour. As well, the view was expressed that
changes in the way women appear in broadcasting are inevitable, as long as
society itself continues to change. |
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Those appearing from the advertising industry supported the
idea of promoting a more positive image of women in commercials, but argued
that they have no mandate to change the world but a responsibility to work in
a changing world and to reflect those changes in their commercials. |
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Many members of the public felt that what they see and hear
on the Canadian broadcasting system fails to represent existing Canadian
society, and more particularly, underrepresents and misrepresents Canadian
women. The public's concern did not stop with what appeared on the media, but
continued with the impact such repeated images have on shaping and
influencing attitudes and opinions. |
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A variety of opinion was expressed as to the degree to which
women's participation in society should be represented. Some members of the
public argued, for instance, that women should make up one-half of all those
seen or heard in Canadian broadcasting. Other supported the view that
broadcasters should take a deliberately proactive stance and present a
significant number of women even in areas where, in reality, there are still
few women (as in politics or engineering, for example). |
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Industry Guidelines: While some members of the public felt
that the industry guidelines were only meant as a tool to educate
broadcasters, others stated that the guidelines should be used as concrete
targets. The public seemed to feel that no matter how good the guidelines may
be, they are ineffective without a means of ensuring that they are
implemented. Certain elements of the guidelines were mentioned explicitly as
being imprecise and overall too vague to be measurable. |
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The CAB suggested that any definition of sex-role
stereotyping is open to subjective interpretation but that the goal is
equality between men and women. The CAB also stated that the guidelines are
being reviewed to ensure that they are reflective of, and sensitive to,
today's society, and that they cover all areas of concern. Those representing
the advertising industry indicated that "the way in which some of these
[advertising] guidelines are stated at the moment ... is a bit vague and ...
open to interpretation. In their view, the AAB guidelines were primarily
intended to sensitize advertisers to the existence of the problem. They did
acknowledge, however, that difficulties did arise in evaluating the validity
of complaints about specific commercials because the guidelines were open to
interpretation; for example, guideline #6 was not interpreted to include the
use of sexuality and violence in advertising although Consumer Association
representatives on the AAB Advisory Committee interpreted it in that way.
Others expressed the view that advertisers and agencies who made an honest
effort would be able to realize when commercials had contravened the AAB
guidelines. Representatives from the Association of Canadian Advertisers
(ACA) felt the guidelines were adequate, and the CAF expressed the view that
the guidelines should remain unchanged. |
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The Educational Process: The President of the CAB was of the
view that "broadcasters' understanding of the issue is improved and their
attitudes are changing." He also outlined specific measures taken by the CAB
and individual broadcasters to increase awareness of the problem (e.g.,
public service announcements). He noted, however, that the ERIN analysis
"clearly describes persistent sex-role problems in the broadcast media." |
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The President of the CAF thought that the situation had
improved since 1979. In his view, some success had been achieved, at least in
educating those involved about the problem. According to CAF's comments at
the public hearings, one of the most important aspects of the advertising
industry's self-regulatory process was its effort to educate and sensitize
its members, noting as an example, the presentation of the film, "Women Say
the Darndest Things". |
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The CAF said it had also organized and participated in many
seminars during the self-regulatory period, meeting frequently with
advertisers and broadcasters alike. In addition, it emphasized that, in
responding to comments from the public, it had contacted many advertisers
personally, to inform them not only of the existence of specific complaints,
but also to discuss the importance of dealing with the issue of sex-role
stereotyping in commercials. |
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The President and Director-General of COGEP submitted that
COGEP had distributed over 7,000 flyers outlining the Quebec sex-role
stereotyping guidelines to industry and had cooperated closely with le
Conseil du statut de la femme on the issue of sex-role stereotyping. |
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However, some members of the public felt that the
broadcasting and advertising industry's efforts to educate Canadians about
the problem of sex-role stereotyping were inadequate and that the public had
to assume too much responsibility in this area. |
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Industry Committees and the CBC: Both the broadcasters and
the advertisers described how they had developed and maintained committees to
deal with the public's comments and to oversee industry initiatives during
the self-regulatory period. Certain concerns were expressed by the public
during the hearings, however, with regard to the committees' contribution to
self-regulation. Some participants raised questions about the committees'
membership, sanctions and public accountability. Questions were raised about
the proportion of public representation on the committees; how they were
funded; how frequently they met; what support staff existed to follow up on
unanswered complaints; who decided if guidelines had been breached and what
sanctions could be invoked; whether accurate records had been kept to monitor
improvement; and, finally, if appeals were possible (and to whom) if the
complainant disagreed with the result of an investigation. |
|
Some noted that, although broadcaster and advertiser
committees had begun with adequate resources, this had changed over time.
According to the public members of the original Task Force, industry
commitment had waned considerably, particularly with regard to the voluntary
committee structures. |
|
The CAB described its Standing Committee on Sex-Role
Stereotyping as an active one, whose scope has been broadened to include
current issues of social concern, such as violence, children's programming,
native broadcasting, closed captioning for the hearing-impaired and
pornographic lyrics. The name of the committee has also been changed to the
Societal Issues Committee. An original achievement of the committee in 1982
was the creation of the guidelines for private broadcasting regarding
sex-role stereotyping, and it also coordinated the complaints procedure and
educational program. |
|
The advertisers described the on-going role of the AAB
Advisory Committee on Sex-Role Stereotyping and noted that its primary
function was an educational one. It consisted of a large representation from
the advertising industry and some representation from the public, which was
subsequently dropped. They reported that the committee had allocated about
$500,000 to the sex-role stereotyping issue between 1980 and 1985, and that
after it was disbanded in 1984, it was replaced by two committees composed
only of industry members dedicated more to working with agencies and
advertisers, and to setting standards and goals. |
|
The ACA outlined research which it had initiated and spoke of
the continuing joint committee between ACA-ICA and the Association of
Canadian Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA) to seek practical solutions in
areas requiring improvement, for example, voice-overs. It also suggested that
the CRTC act as a catalyst, convening informal meetings to discuss research,
changes in society regarding the roles of the sexes and to review concerns. |
|
COGEP stated that in 1981, the Quebec guidelines on sex-role
stereotyping were adopted by the advertising industry on a national basis,
and at the Montreal hearing stated that it had joined the CAF in 1982. With
nine members representing a variety of associations, its mandate is to act on
behalf of the advertising industry in Quebec as a catalyst. |
|
The CBC, at the hearing, also gave an account of its
activities during and since the self-regulatory period. It stated that all
advertisements for broadcasting are reviewed under the Corporation's
standards and that the CBC has endorsed the AAB guidelines on sex-role
stereotyping and joined the CAF. The CBC has also done a study, "Looking for
Ms. Right", a report containing a list of 1,000 qualified women to be
interviewed on 27 different subjects. Language guidelines have been compiled
by linguists in the French and English languages and a commitment was made to
give ongoing breakdowns of on-air personnel. A separate department is
coordinating employment equity and an external group has also been created to
monitor videos used on the networks. Many activities were also described by
the CBC to publicize the issue of sex-role stereotyping within the
Corporation, and consultations were held on the issue with a number of
organizations both within and outside Canada. |
|
Complaint Mechanisms: Many members of the public expressed
dissatisfaction with the complaint mechanism of the self-regulatory process,
noting the lack of staff and follow-up, and particularly the lack of
effective action with regard to the subsequent removal or modification of
material felt to be offensive. There was concern as well about what some felt
were the minimal resources the CBC put into its Office of the Coordinator,
Portrayal of Women and the fact that the Office was unstaffed for a period of
time. |
|
MediaWatch stated that it had distributed to the public, free
of charge, forms for their comments; these forms were designed to ensure the
appropriate routing of the complaints. |
|
While CAB indicated that it forwarded complaints on to its
members, it apparently did not automatically receive copies of stations'
responses to these complaints, and therefore could not indicate their impact. |
|
At the hearing, the CAB proposed a new concept to deal with
complaints, an independent Broadcast Council which would act as a "clearing
house for complaints", a "court of first instance". The Council would
receive, review and seek resolution of public complaints about broadcast
program content. It would also liaise with the CAF and disseminate
information to broadcasters and the public. Membership would be voluntary and
an annual report would be published. |
|
The CAF stated that after the AAB's Sex-Role Stereotyping
Committee was disbanded in October 1984, the CAF continued to administer the
guidelines by forwarding all complaints received to individual advertisers
and their agencies. The CAF noted that in 1985 it investigated 342 complaints
about all media; 124 were upheld, of which 38 involved broadcast material. It
is unclear whether "upheld" meant that affected commercials stayed the same,
were modified or were withdrawn as a result. The CAF reported that
discussions with public representatives who initially served on the committee
were not always helpful, and that over time, the complaint process received
less attention and publicity. A major difficulty arose when commercials were
found to have violated the guidelines, since self-regulation does not
generally entail the use of sanctions that have force of law. |
|
COGEP reported that, since 1981, it had received a declining
number of complaints and in its opinion, self-regulation had proved
successful. A concern was expressed by others at the hearing that not all
complaints were responded to and a reason for the declining number of
complaints could have been due to less publicizing of the issue and the
complaints procedure. |
|
Some members of the public noted that the process of
self-regulation lacked accountability: according to MediaWatch, for example,
difficulties arose when it contacted the CAB and the CAF to obtain the
results of complaints. MediaWatch submitted that repeated requests for such
information received no response. |
|
Many of the participants at the three public hearings made
recommendations to the CRTC as to what further action should be taken by the
Commission to deal with sex-role stereotyping. Most of the areas covered by
these recommendations are set out below. A full record of all recommendations
can be found in the hearing transcripts. |
|
Recommendations by area |
|
- accept as evidence of sex-role stereotyping in the broadcast media, the
findings of the monitoring reports of the CBC, MediaWatch and ERIN
Research;
|
|
- conclude that self-regulation has not succeeded in eliminating sex-role
stereotyping;
|
|
- review and revise the guidelines on sex-role stereotyping in a public
forum; make adherence to the guidelines a condition of licence; include the
prohibition of pornographic material in these guidelines; and apply the
same guidelines to specialty channels and to foreign program acquisitions;
|
|
- acknowledge the need for legislation and regulation in order to
eliminate sex-role stereotyping and to make a provision for penalties for
failure to comply with guidelines;
|
|
- ensure the sex-role stereotyping guidelines are included also in all
other industry codes;
|
|
- institute a period of regulation of the broadcast media and further,
monitor the advertising industry and the broadcast media with respect to
sex-role stereotyping, requiring regular reports;
|
|
- require broadcasters to inform audiences of sex-role stereotyping
guidelines in public announcements, including the way in which the public
can complain;
|
|
- require licensees by condition of licence to implement an employment
equity program in order to achieve equal representation between women and
men on all programming and in all job categories; and require annual
reports indicating gender balance;
|
|
- undertake a content analysis of videos and restrict those which are of
a sexual, abusive, sexist and stereotyped nature;
|
|
- implement a public complaint mechanism with an accompanying public
education program;
|
|
- pursue the education of both industries regarding sex-role
stereotyping;
|
|
- establish a Human Rights Directorate to function under the CRTC to act
on complaints and to review the performances of broadcasters and
advertisers, with enforcement procedures; - establish a continuing internal
task force on sex-role stereotyping;
|
|
- encourage the appointment of women to the CRTC with a goal of equal
representation by 1990;
|
|
- commission an industry-wide study in two years;
|
|
- change the CRTC hearing structure, compensate interveners and allow
interrogatories and cross-examination at hearings;
|
|
- conduct regular public hearings on sex-role stereotyping.
|
|
B. INDUSTRY COMMITMENTS MADE AT HEARINGS
|
|
During the hearings, both segments of the broadcasting
industry and advertising associations made significant and extensive
commitments with regard to sex-role stereotyping. The Commission commends the
various industries in undertaking to make such commitments on their own
initiative. It will expect them to be implemented and will follow industries'
progress in this area closely. These commitments are highlighted below: |
|
Commitments by the CBC |
|
1. To take measures to ensure that on-air personnel reflect
the growing role of women in Canadian society; and that broadcast programs
take into account the diversity of roles played by women in Canadian society; |
|
2. to have each CBC department manager, with his or her
program director, evaluate his or her section, establish a realistic
objective for hiring on-air women taking into account the availability of
qualified candidates and program content, and capable of being implemented
and measured; |
|
3. to provide the Commission with data on women's
representation from 1980 to 1985 in the Corporation's executive and senior
management categories, and on-air personnel for technical and production
groups on a voluntary basis as undertaken at the hearing; |
|
4. to issue sexist language guidelines in a brief, practical
form for wide distribution. |
|
Commitments by the CAB on behalf of its members |
|
- To assist in the development of programming which presents fair and
accurate portrayals of all people;
- to ensure the broadcast of programming which does not contain offensive
portrayals of men or women;
- to be reflective of society today, presenting informative fare and
tasteful entertainment;
- to provide broadcasters with tools and directions to show them how to
eliminate the offensive portrayal of persons;
- to assume a leadership role in the formation of a Broadcast Council
which would bring together the broadcasting industry and the public at
large to work side-by-side on solving the problem of sex-role stereotyping;
- to work with industry, government and public representatives to develop
a sound and workable Council;
- to consult with the public and the Broadcast Council about how
broadcasters should evaluate and assess their progress so as to result in
measurable criteria;
- to endeavour to provide the Council with working capital in the first
year;
- to have the Broadcast Council examine and assess the validity of SRS
complaints about broadcasting;
- to develop, in conjunction with the Broadcast Council, practical and
meaningful plans that will assist broadcasters in addressing sexist issues
throughout its membership;
- to provide the CRTC with a plan of action by October 1986 about the
presentation of women in and by the broadcast industry in a non-restrictive
and more comprehensive manner;
- to ensure that part of the plan of action deals with a series of public
service announcements on radio and television, describing the Broadcast
Council and complaints procedure;
- to review the CAB guidelines to see whether additional guidelines are
needed to cover troublesome areas which have surfaced since 1982 (i.e.,
rock videos);
- to ensure the wording of the guidelines remains appropriate and
relevant;
- to include its SRS guidelines (see Appendix A) with other industry
codes as reference in pre-clearance procedures for the advertising of
feminine hygiene products and as reference in the current codes on
advertising directed to children;
- to reprint its pamphlet when the guidelines are finalized and include
sexist language guidelines;
- to review all complaints against the CAB guidelines and to point out to
offending members which specific guidelines have been violated;
- to work with the networks and stations to prepare a campaign with more
SRS public service announcements which will also publicize the comment
lines [which were suggested by the CAB to receive public input on the
programming provided by broadcasters];
- to notify the public on a continuing basis about the complaints
procedure;
- to propose to its members that they consider the introduction of
dedicated phone lines or toll-free numbers at their stations for the
receipt of comments on programming;
- to cooperate in, and contribute to (along with other parties) another
study comparable to ERIN within four years;
- to measure any future study on change against the guidelines which were
used in the ERIN/CRTC research;
- to distribute comprehensive lists of qualified women on which stations
may draw in order to select commentators or experts in all fields;
- to work with the CAB Nominating Committee to ensure the [appointment]
of more women to the CAB Board of Directors and all internal committees;
- to ask the [CAB] Board whether it is willing voluntarily to submit
figures on the number of women and men employed [in the industry], the
positions and the salary ranges;
- to examine the usefulness of a CAB employment clearing house.
|
|
Commitments by the CAF |
|
- To continue its special efforts towards equality for all Canadians;
- to continue to administer the advertising industry's program of
self-regulation;
- to establish a committee, called the Committee on Sexuality and
Violence in Canadian Advertising, to explore the issue and its implications
with committee members from the public sector as well as the advertising
community. This committee will also adjudicate complaints related to the
presence of sexuality and violence in Canadian advertising;
- To continue its work on sex-role stereotyping with a new, modified
committee (the Advisory Panel on Sex-Role Stereotyping), made up of people
from the industry who will screen and monitor complaints, work with the
industry to maintain the educational process, and pay special attention to
regional and special sector problems; 5.to develop a program with
advertisers and advertising agencies to encourage voluntary consultation;
- to develop educational programs for [major] advertisers and agencies,
as well as for smaller ones;
- to incorporate a statement with regard to the portrayal of women when
codes of standards are revised or when new codes are developed;
- to ensure that the SRS guidelines are included as reference wherever
pre-clearance is now required (children's commercials and feminine hygiene
product commercials);
- to set firm and measurable objectives for the implementation of
guidelines which may be identified as requiring particular attention (e.g.,
male/female voice-over ratio);
- to monitor national and regional advertising for violations of the AAB
guidelines (see Appendix A) in order to initiate discussions with
advertisers;
- to develop a complaint solicitation program that would inform the
general public more about its ability to register disapproval about
specific commercials;
- to provide for the staffing at the AAB of a complaints handling
specialist;
- to endorse and cooperate with the CAB in the establishment and
operation of the Broadcast Council;
- to purchase attitude research to assess and deal with current issues of
concern to the public;
- to endorse the ERIN research and to contribute to any future comparable
research study;
- to share the additional research obtained by the CAF with the CRTC;
- to develop a relationship with the CRTC in which the advertising
industry would report on progress and discuss objectives with the CRTC.
|
|
Commitments by the ACA |
|
- To continue its effort to remove negative sex-role stereotyping;
- to discuss [with its members] legitimate goals which can be achieved
within a reasonable time period;
- to make efforts to convince its members of the importance of supporting
the SRS guidelines;
- to stay involved in the educational process through sensitization,
advice to members, workshops and meetings;
- to support the CAF in its efforts to monitor, assess and evaluate
advertising;
- to support and participate in the work of the CAF and the Advertising
Standards Council;
- to assist in any endeavour to improve and publicize the complaint
system.
|
|
Commitments by CTV Television Network |
|
- To consent to the Commission is separating out data dealing with the
CTV from the data collected by ERIN;
- to consider the value of the CAB's proposed Broadcast Council, when the
proposal has been finalized;
- to file with the CRTC, at the same time as its yearly report,
employment figures on a voluntary basis so that growth and development can
be shown, with job descriptions and a salary range for the job descriptions
included. These figures are to be used to show changes over time but not to
be evaluated on a yearly basis.
|
|
III. COMMISSION FINDINGS
|
|
The Role of Canadian Broadcasters |
|
In assessing whether industry self-regulation over the
two-year trial period has been effective in dealing with sex-role
stereotyping, the Commission has carefully considered and weighed all
relevant factors. In the design set up by the original Task Force to deal
with the problem, many constituencies were engaged and processes set in
motion. |
|
The Commission has attempted to evaluate the result of each
of these processes. This was done with an awareness of the importance of the
issue of sex-role stereotyping which directly affects more than half of the
Canadian population, not only in terms of equality of rights, but in the more
human context of severely reducing women's aspirations, options and potential
advancement with respect to careers. As the CAF said in its presentation at
the hearings: |
|
Sex-role stereotyping is not merely a social issue affecting
one portion of the population. It affects all of us, and most particularly
the more than half the population who are women. |
|
From among the data evaluated by the Commission one example
will serve as an illustration. Over the last two decades, the number of
single parent families headed by a women has grown faster than any other type
of household. At the same time, while more and more women have been employed
outside the home, their share of income has remained small. Where the average
income earned by families headed by single men grew by over a third, the
income earned by families headed by single women grew by less than a fifth.
The implications for society, including those of social costs, are profound. |
|
The Commission agrees with the broadcasters that they are not
the only "keeper of national mores nor the prescribed catalyst for social
change." It does believe, however, that broadcasting is crucial to the
development of social change. This is in part due to the "multiplier effect".
A parent, by his or her actions, influences only the children in the family
in the course of a generation. A teacher may affect anywhere from 30 to 300
pupils in the course of a year. Broadcasting stations and networks, on the
other hand, send their messages out to audiences that can be counted in
thousands and even millions, every single day. With such a pervasive reach,
the broadcast media may well be the most powerful common socializing
experience across Canada, as well as a mass cultural instrument reflecting
society. |
|
The Commission's licensees operate some 1,467 television
stations, 758 AM and 778 FM radio stations. Some 99% of the Canadian
population have access to at least one each of the radio and television
networks. Canadians watch more than 500 million hours of television and
listen to more than 400 million hours of radio each week. An average Canadian
spends 4 hours per day watching television and 3 hours per day listening to
radio. Within the programs seen and heard, the average person sees or hears
about 100 commercials on television and about 70 commercials on radio per
day. Children, on average, watch at least 3 hours of television per day,
which means that they see about 75 commercials per day, or about 27,500 per
year. |
|
Broadcasting is therefore a powerful medium to reinforce
sex-role stereotyping and can be an equally powerful one to correct it. |
|
Expectations from the self-regulatory period |
|
It became clear from submissions that different expectations
about the self-regulatory period had been held. Where many members of the
public had hoped that self-regulation would eliminate sex-role stereotyping
in broadcasting and commercials, the majority of those representing the
industry appeared to expect that those involved would become more sensitive
to the issue and in this way, gradually reduce sex-role stereotyping in the
media. |
|
In assessing the results of the self-regulatory period, the
Commission's own expectation was not that all sex-role stereotyping would
have disappeared; however, it did expect that significant progress would have
been made in a number of important areas. It expected that: |
|
- the industry committees established by the broadcasters and advertisers
would develop and implement plans for self-regulation, would oversee the
complaint process and would educate the industry on the issue;
|
|
- the industries' self-regulatory guidelines would prove effective in
reducing sex-role stereotyping which in certain areas would be measured by
the ERIN study;
|
|
- the representation of women within the broadcasting system would show
some increase and be more balanced in many areas and in particular within
programs produced in Canada;
|
|
- the CBC, which had been aware of and working on the problem of sex-role
stereotyping even before the CRTC Task Force was established, would show
the most progress;
|
|
- the complaint mechanism established by both industries would respond
effectively to the public's concerns;
|
|
- the industry committees and the individual broadcasters would respond
to the CRTC request for reports on their activities and commitments to
reduce sex-role stereotyping;
|
|
- a heightened awareness of the issue of sex-role stereotyping would be
present among the industries and the public as well;
|
|
- public response, as demonstrated by letters, would show a decline of
concern regarding the issue.
|
|
Finally, it expected that it would receive some confirmation
at the three public hearings that self-regulatory activities which the
industries had undertaken had been largely effective in meeting public
concern on the issue, and that the industry, through undertakings made at the
hearings, would show a firm commitment for continuing change. |
|
In brief, it expected progress, awareness and commitment, and
if significant movement could be shown in all three areas, then in its view,
the two-year period of self-regulation could be declared a success. A firm
commitment for continued change would be an important criterion in making
such a determination. |
|
It must be emphasized that, in assessing the success of
self-regulation, the employment of women in either industry or the CBC was
not used as a criterion, although this issue was widely discussed at all
public hearings. |
|
In the Commission's opinion, self-regulation was most
successful in the two areas of awareness and commitment. Without doubt, there
is a heightened awareness of the issue of sex-role stereotyping both in the
general public and the broadcasting and advertising industries. In the
Commission's opinion the activities of these industries during the
self-regulatory period, although gradually diminishing over time, showed an
effort to change, and commitments were expressed through undertakings made at
the hearings to improve and revitalize the process for continued progress in
the future. Unfortunately, actual progress appeared to be less successfully
demonstrated. In this regard, it is important to reflect on the industries'
guidelines and some of the inequities they were created to address, as
expressed in Images of Women: |
|
- unequal treatment of women as regards intellectual and emotional
capacity;
- the relative invisibility of women in broadcasting;
- the absence of the portrayal of women in their increasing diversity
with respect to lifestyle, as well as age group, ethnic origin or physical
appearance;
- the showing of women in limited roles and appearances;
- the absence of women as experts and authority figures;
- the use of non-inclusive language;
- the absence of women as voice-overs;
- the use of women as decorative objects.
|
|
The Commission cannot measure progress in these areas from
ERIN's studies because they showed only one point in time. What the studies
could show is demonstrably different treatment of men and women in some of
the above areas after two years of self-regulation. One of the most
measurable of the industries' guidelines which could be assessed using ERIN's
results, that of visibility of women for example, indeed showed large
inequality in the treatment of women and men. |
|
In assessing the self-regulatory period, the Commission
considered the following areas: |
|
1) The guidelines: In assessing the CAB and AAB guidelines,
the Commission considers these to be excellent statements of the principles
underlying industry commitment to reduce and eventually eliminate sex-role
stereotyping. However, there is room for improvement to help both
broadcasters and advertisers continue their efforts in reducing sex-role
stereotyping. The guidelines would benefit from the addition of definitions
and, in some cases, from the creation of new guidelines to deal with new
issues (such as rock videos), as suggested by the CAB and AAB themselves.
Concentration of effort on three or four of the most easily measurable
guidelines, or on up to five of the elements of the guidelines as the CAB
suggested, could ensure demonstrable progress before the next monitoring
study is done. |
|
2) The Industry Committees and Station Reports: The
Commission notes that both the broadcasters and advertisers established
active committees to design and implement plans for self-regulation; these
committees also dealt with complaints and submitted interim and final reports
to the CRTC to account for industry activities over the two-year
self-regulatory period. It is on the basis of these reports and the
submissions made by the industries at the public hearings that the Commission
finds that the two industries have made considerable effort to change the
image of women in the broadcast media, and to work with their own members to
make them aware of the issue and to help them respond in a constructive,
effective way. It was also apparent that, once the two-year period was over,
the effort and commitment had diminished. |
|
In the Commission's view it is important that these
committees receive a high priority with the industries, that they regularly
review the industries' progress in dealing with sex-role stereotyping, that
they do some self-monitoring on progress, and that they meet on a yearly
basis with the Commission to present annual plans for ensuring progress
within their industry. These committees should also oversee the complaint
process set up by industry. |
|
As previously stated, the CBC also submitted interim and
final reports outlining action taken during the two-year self-regulatory
period and the permanent Office of the Portrayal of Women was very active.
The Commission finds that the CBC has pursued its efforts to deal with
sex-role stereotyping in the networks and in the regions, and that senior
management appears supportive of this effort. However, it also notes that the
Office of the Portrayal of Women was without a coordinator for some time and
the Office and staff are very limited for dealing with such a large
Corporation. This is partially compensated for by the quality of the
coordinators it has been able to attract. The Commission will wish to review
on a yearly basis the efforts of the CBC and this Office, and to receive
annual plans for undiminished commitment. |
|
Public Notice CRTC 1983-211 dated 16 September 1983 required
individual station reports from every broadcaster in Canada. As previously
stated, the CAB member stations' response was much superior to that of
non-CAB member stations, with a response rate of 87% as compared to 49% of
non-CAB members. |
|
The Commission finds that a large proportion of CAB members
took action to a greater or lesser extent to deal with sex-role stereotyping
in their individual stations, and is of the opinion that what is important is
to ensure that these activities continue after the self-regulatory period.
The overall response of non-CAB members was much less reassuring. This result
appeared to indicate that most CAB members are sensitized to and aware of the
issue, but over half of non-CAB members have much less awareness of the
problem; a solution proposed for continuing change and progress must take
this fact into consideration. |
|
3) The Complaint Mechanism: The Commission assessed progress
in this area by noting whether the number of complaints about sex-role
stereotyping remained constant, decreased or increased over the two-year
period and beyond, and how well these complaints were dealt with. |
|
Of the letters received between 1982 and 1985, approximately
16% were received during the first year of the two-year period and about 29%
in the second year; while about 55% were received between September 1984 and
April 1985. The vast majority were directed at English-language commercials
and programming. Comments about French-language commercials and programming
accounted for only 3% of all letters. The Commission continues to receive
letters expressing concern about broadcast sex-role stereotyping at a rate of
approximately one a day. |
|
The Commission notes the active role played by MediaWatch in
expediting the letter-writing complaint process, by providing comment forms
free of charge across Canada. Had it been possible for MediaWatch to screen
letters unrelated to Canadian broadcast programming and advertising or not
directly relevant to the issue, the process would have been facilitated. The
fact that in some cases a large number of letters were received from a small
number of people was taken into account and weighted accordingly. |
|
Many stations and all of the industry associations concerned
implemented procedures to handle and address complaints. In the Commission's
opinion, several factors were important to the success of such mechanisms:
the representation and participation of the public, the degree to which
complaints, once forwarded to the stations or advertisers involved were
followed-up, and the eventual effect these comments had in reducing or
eliminating sex-role stereotyping. |
|
The Commission noted with concern, therefore, that public
representation was dropped from some committees, since, while acknowledging
that it makes the process longer and more difficult, it is still imperative
in the Commission's view that some informed members of the public continue to
sit on or act as consultants to the various complaints committees. |
|
The complaints procedure followed by the advertisers was, in
the Commission's opinion, more efficient and effective than that of the CAB,
for the following reasons: |
|
The CAB's complaints procedure lacked public participation.
As well, insufficient follow-up was found once a complaint had been sent to a
broadcaster, and no attempts were made to evaluate whether a CAB guideline
had been breached. Commitment to the CAB's complaints procedure diminished
over the two-year period under review and there is no evidence that an
adequate complaint procedure is currently in place. The Commission notes that
advertisers generally cooperated in taking significant steps to deal with
complaints. Those resulting in "benchmark" decisions, or those which could
not be satisfactorily resolved at the staff level, were reviewed by the
advertisers' Advisory Committee on Sex-Role Stereotyping as a whole. The
CAF's complaint procedure appeared to be more thorough, and with renewed
public participation should be satisfactory. |
|
In the Commission's opinion the complaints procedure has most
of the elements necessary to be effective, although this was an area highly
criticized at the public hearings. It needs strengthening, however, in the
following ways: |
|
- There must be knowledgeable public representation chosen by industry to
sit on the committees to maintain a fresh perspective on sex-role
stereotyping when these committees view programs and commercials regarding
complaints.
|
|
- The committees in some cases have been reduced to one or two persons
who have total discretion to determine which complaints will be considered
and upheld, as in the case of COGEP, and this, in the Commission's view, is
too limited a review process. The committees need to be enlarged.
|
|
- While adequate follow-up was done by the advertisers, this was not the
case with the CAB and must be rectified. As well, it would be helpful for
the CAB to make a determination as to whether a guideline has been breached
or not, and so inform the broadcaster concerned.
|
|
The CBC deals with programming complaints internally, and
works with the CAF when dealing with advertising complaints, which process
appears adequate. |
|
4) Industry and Public Awareness: The industry committees and
the CBC's Office of the Portrayal of Women have all worked to increase
industry and public awareness of the issue of sex-role stereotyping, as have
those committees set up in the individual stations. The Commission expects
the industries to continue their efforts in this regard, and has noted
commitments made at the hearings to do so. It is especially important that
the public be informed of the complaints mechanisms. |
|
MediaWatch has also played an active part in keeping the
issue before the public, in intervening at hearings, and encouraging public
awareness and response. |
|
5) Public Hearing Submissions: The most significant fact
regarding public submissions at the hearings was that the overwhelming
majority expressed some degree of dissatisfaction both with the way in which
industry self-regulation was supposed to have taken place, and with the
results shown at the end of the self-regulatory period. In many cases, the
view expressed was that only regulation could deal with sex-role stereotyping
and that equal treatment for women in the Canadian broadcasting media should
be entrenched in the Broadcasting Act. |
|
On the other hand, the CAB, while acknowledging the need for
more work in certain areas, thought the period successful insofar as most
broadcasters are now sensitized to the sex-role stereotyping issue. This view
was echoed by the advertisers. Neither the broadcasters nor the advertisers
felt there was any need to initiate government regulation: industry
self-regulation had at least made substantial progress towards its goals.
Those in the industry felt that voluntary initiatives, rather than sanctions
in any form, would achieve far more in reducing sex-role stereotyping. |
|
The Commission finds from the public hearings that there is a
wide diversity of opinion as to whether or not self-regulation has been
effective in reducing or eliminating sex-role stereotyping from the broadcast
media. |
|
ERIN Research Findings
|
|
For expert analysis of guideline compliance for
both the broadcasting and advertising industries, the Commission has placed
two studies on the public file, that of CRTC staff (Staff Comments on the
Results Obtained by the ERIN Content Analyses on Sex-Role Portrayal,
October 1986) and that of ERIN (Statistical Analysis of CAB and AAB
Guidelines as a Basis for Assessing Industry Compliance, December 1986).
This latter study was commissioned by the CRTC after consultation with
representatives of the CAB, CAF, CBC and public members of the original task
force. |
|
The Commission has drawn its general conclusions
from the studies. It has also reviewed the content analyses of CBC and
MediaWatch. |
|
As stated earlier, the Commission did not expect
the elimination of all sex-role stereotyping in the space of two years and
therefore did not yet expect equal representation of men and women in the
programming and advertising broadcast at the end of the self-regulatory
period. The following conclusions by the Commission therefore are based on
reasonable compliance with the guidelines measured. |
|
In regard to the CAB guidelines (Appendix A)
against which the programming was assessed, the Commission has concluded that
none of the guidelines that were measured was fully met or met to a
reasonable degree in either television or radio programming. Guideline #3
("Broadcasting should reflect a contemporary family structure") was the
closest to being met, but only on English-language television. |
|
The visibility or presence of women is the
greatest problem, with large differences in gender balance in both television
and radio programming. Women's presence, however, is more nearly equal on
daytime television drama, on both French- and English-language stations. |
|
A significant difference also exists in the roles
women and men play, both on English- and French-language television. Women as
authorities and experts were not much in evidence in either television or
radio programming. |
|
In regard to the AAB guidelines (Appendix A)
against which commercials were assessed, there was closer compliance with the
guidelines measured. |
|
The visibility of women in commercials on both
English- and French-language television was greater than in programming. In
radio, the gender balance in advertising was better than in television,
especially on French radio advertising. |
|
Role variables in advertising showed significant
differences between men and women, but less on French-language than on
English-language television advertisements. |
|
The lack of women as experts and authorities
continued to be a major problem. Voice-overs also showed very large
discrepancies on both television and radio advertising, although less so on
television than on radio, and less on French-language than on
English-language stations. |
|
The guidelines assessed in this way were CAB
guidelines 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 9 and AAB guidelines 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 9. |
|
The Commission commends the efforts of the CBC in
conducting its own studies of the portrayal of women over time and its
commitment to do future studies. The summary of the studies as submitted,
however, did not present the way in which sex-role portrayal had been
measured or include information on levels of statistical significance
obtained. The Commission, therefore, is unable to compare the CBC's
methodology with that of ERIN or to determine whether any changes occurred
over time as a result of special Corporation policy or by random chance.
While very useful to the Corporation to measure change over time, the public
release of all the data used would have been very helpful for other
comparisons to be made. |
|
The Commission also commends the efforts of
MediaWatch in undertaking studies on this issue at two points in time,
involving the time and effort of many volunteers. The reports, however,
lacked important information that would have allowed the Commission to make
greater use of its findings such as the way sex-role stereotyping was defined
and measured, the way in which the self-regulatory guidelines were measured,
and the levels of statistical significance obtained. It should be noted,
however, that MediaWatch submitted some material later that could not form
part of the public record. In the Commission's view, a change in research
strategy between the first and second time point of its analysis could have
contributed to the differences found between men and women's representation
and portrayal. The Commission also acknowledges the second study presented by
MediaWatch comparing the studies of ERIN, the CBC and MediaWatch, and notes
that this was the only study of its kind submitted by any participant. |
|
IV. CONCLUSION
|
|
After considering all of the evidence referred to
in the foregoing sections, including the views and submissions presented
before it at the hearings, the actions and commitments made by broadcasters
and advertising industry representatives, and the research, the Commission
acknowledges that considerable work has been done to sensitize and educate
the industry and the public to the issue of sex-role stereotyping and that a
significant effort has been made both by broadcasters and advertisers alike,
as well as by members of the public to make self-regulation work.
Notwithstanding this effort, however, the Commission concludes from all of
the foregoing that self-regulation has been only partially successful and
that further action is necessary. In determining the action to take, the
Commission has been mindful of the many substantial commitments voluntarily
made by the industries, but also the need to encompass in its action plan
those who do not belong to any industry association. |
|
Accordingly, the Commission outlines in the
following section specific expectations and recommendations to the various
parties concerned. |
|
Commission Expectations and Recommendations
|
|
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |
|
The Commission expects the CBC: |
|
- Because of its size, importance and special role in the Canadian
broadcasting system, to show leadership in providing a more equal
reflection and a better portrayal of women in the media.
- To release to the public any future studies on sex-role stereotyping in
their complete form.
- To review its complaints procedures for programming and commercials on
all networks and submit a semi-annual report to the Commission on
complaints and their disposition.
- To review its sex-role stereotyping guidelines and submit a report to
the Commission.
- To send its inclusive-language guidelines to its owned-and-operated
stations and to its affiliates.
- To meet with and submit an annual report to the Commission on its
efforts to eliminate sex-role stereotyping both on- and off-air, with the
knowledge that these reports will be put on the public file. It should also
present plans on a yearly basis for continuing the effort to eliminate
sex-role stereotyping in radio and television.
|
|
The Canadian Association of Broadcasters |
|
1. The CAB should take immediate steps to review
the present guidelines in consultation with public representatives selected
by the CAB and knowledgeable of issues relating to sex-role stereotyping. The
revised guidelines should be submitted to the CRTC for acceptance by 1 April
1987. The review should add definitions of some terms (such as, "contemporary
family structure") and also add new guidelines where necessary (for example,
for rock videos, etc.). The guidelines should not be so altered as to
preclude future content analysis comparisons with the 1984 ERIN study
commissioned by the CRTC. The Commission also accepts the suggestion of the
CAB that up to five critical areas be initially identified as targets for
research and as measurements for change over three years (areas such as the
number of women as experts and commentators, voice-overs excluding
advertising, women as hosts and anchors, and the use of non-sexist language).
This research should be done within the next monitoring period. |
|
2. Following the steps outlined in Recommendation
1 above, the revised CAB guidelines will then be known as: "The Broadcasting
Industry's Self-Regulatory Code on Sex-Role Stereotyping." |
|
3. While the Commission finds the CAB's proposal
for a Broadcast Council interesting, it lacks sufficient detail as to its
mandate, membership, funding and incentive for joining to make a
determination as to whether the Council as proposed could deal effectively
with sex-role stereotyping complaints. The CAB is encouraged to develop the
concept. Until the feasibility of the Broadcast Council can be shown, the
Commission recommends that the CAB review and strengthen its present
complaints mechanism by analysing whether or not a complaint involves a
violation of the industry guidelines. The CAB Complaints Committee should be
enlarged to include some public representation, and the CAB should follow up
complaints to see that the complainant receives a prompt and reasonable
response. The CAB should report semi-annually to the CRTC on its treatment of
complaints. Complaints concerning non-CAB members will continue to be dealt
with directly by the CRTC and the Commission will continue to act as a
mechanism for resolving complaints. |
|
4. The CAB should also continue on a regular
basis its efforts to help the industry eliminate sex-role stereotyping
through its own educational efforts by means of seminars, convention
work-shops, and other initiatives. All broadcasters are expected to continue
to sensitize their staff on the issue of sex-role stereotyping, to review
their own programming and commercials in this regard and to expand on
individual station initiatives taken during the two-year self-regulatory
period so that the issue can be discussed at licence renewal time. |
|
5. The CAB should meet with and report annually
in writing to the CRTC on its members' progress in eliminating sex-role
stereotyping from the broadcast media, noting that these reports will be
available for public examination. It should also present plans on a yearly
basis for continuing the effort to eliminate sex-role stereotyping in radio
and television. |
|
6. The CAB should devise a method whereby
progress can be assessed as to whether and to what extent broadcasters have
been successful in increasing the visibility and involvement of women in
broadcasting, both on and off the air, as per CAB guideline #8 (Appendix A). |
|
7. The CAB should share in the funding of a
second ERIN-type study in 1988. |
|
8. While acknowledging the effort of some
broadcasters to inform the public on the issue of sex-role stereotyping and
on the method of complaining about programs or commercials through the use of
public service announcements, open-line shows, etc., the Commission
encourages the CAB to develop further initiatives and expects all
broadcasters to assume an increased responsibility in this area. |
|
The Canadian Advertising Foundation
|
|
The Commission regulates and monitors broadcast
advertising pursuant to the Broadcasting Act and regulations. It has
jurisdiction to make regulations respecting the character of advertising and
the amount of time that may be devoted to advertising. The CRTC, however, has
no mandate to regulate the advertising industry itself. |
|
At the same time, the Commission notes the great
importance broadcast advertising has, not only in economic terms, but also in
proactive social terms. The Commission acknowledges the high level of
cooperation it has received from the advertising industry, and it is with
this in mind that it makes the following recommendations: |
|
1. The AAB should review its guidelines to ensure
that they are as clear as possible and that additions be made where
necessary. The revised guidelines, which should be submitted to the CRTC for
acceptance prior to their adoption, could deal with such topics as sexuality,
sexualization of children and violence, and be completed by 1 April 1987.
Members of the public knowledgeable of sex-role stereotyping should be
involved in the review. |
|
2. The advertising industry should identify and
set targets for further improvement over the next three years, in specific
areas (such as voice-overs and women as experts) which are easily measurable
so that progress may be shown. |
|
3. The present complaints procedure should be
continued but the review boards for complaints should be enlarged and include
members of the public knowledgeable about the issue. |
|
4. The advertising industry's review committees
should report to the Commission semi-anually about the treatment of
complaints, including the ultimate disposition of upheld complaints. |
|
5. The advertising industry should continue its
educational efforts of its own members. |
|
6. The CAF should work with small advertisers and
licensees to help them eliminate sex-role stereotyping and conform to
industry guidelines. |
|
7. The advertising industry should meet with and
report to the CRTC annually on its progress in eliminating sex-role
stereotyping, noting that the report should include yearly plans for further
action and industry self-education and be made available for public
examination. |
|
8. Consistent with its commitments, the industry
should cooperate in the funding of the proposed follow-up comparative study
in 1988. |
|
The Public
|
|
The Commission emphasizes the importance of
public participation in the elimination of sex-role stereotyping. A vigilant
public, through responsible use of the complaints procedure and interventions
at public hearings can provide invaluable assistance in letting the industry
know how successful it has been in making progress on the issue and also
informing the CRTC whether the present mechanisms are effective. |
|
New communication technologies, such as
satellites, should also be used as a means of facilitating the participation
of the public at distant public hearings. |
|
The Government
|
|
In his statement at the Montreal public hearing,
the then Minister responsible for the Status of Women, the Honourable Walter
McLean, emphasized that there can no longer be any doubt that there is an
urgent need to eliminate sex-role stereotyping in all forms of communication
and emphasized the deep commitment of the government to the goal of full
equality for Canadian women. Specifically, the Minister undertook to initiate
action on voice-overs in advertising produced by the federal government and
reiterated that, at the federal level, guidelines have been in place since
1982 to eliminate sex-role stereotyping in external and internal government
communication. Departments which do not conform have been advised to make the
necessary changes. The Commission supports the government in these
initiatives and acknowledges the importance of such a strong statement to the
industry and the public at this time. |
|
The Commission will request the DOC to
participate with the CRTC, as it has in the past, with the follow-up study to
ERIN to be completed in 1988 in order to assess progress in eliminating
sex-role stereotyping across the Canadian broadcasting and advertising
industries. A study was also suggested at the public hearings on exploring
the possible relationship between the employment of women in the industry and
the nature of programming produced, and the CRTC commands this proposed study
to the government's attention. |
|
The under-representation of women on the CRTC and
the CBC's Board (although much improvement has occurred recently in the
latter case) was also a subject of discussion at the hearings, and the CRTC
also commends this to the attention of the government when appointments are
made. |
|
Condition of Licence
|
|
The Commission notifies all its radio and
television broadcasting licensees, both CAB and non-CAB members, that it
intends to impose a condition of licence when their applications for licence
renewal are considered, requiring their adherence to the CAB self-regulatory
guidelines, as amended from time to time and accepted by the Commission. As
noted earlier, these guidelines are presently being revised by the CAB and,
when accepted by the Commission, will henceforth be referred to as "The
Broadcasting Industry's Self-Regulatory Code on Sex-Role Stereotyping". |
|
In the meantime, consistent with commitments made
at the hearings, the Commission expects all its radio and television
licensees to increase their efforts during the current term of licence
towards the elimination of sex-role stereotyping and to adhere to the CAB
guidelines. |
|
POST-HEARING INDUSTRY COMMITMENTS AND COMMISSION REMARKS
|
|
Commitments: Since the sex-role
stereotyping hearings, the CBC has taken various steps to implement the
commitments it made during the hearings, some of which are outlined below.
The CBC's language guidelines have been redrafted and are now included in the
Corporation's journalistic policy and will be widely distributed. As well,
the CBC has endorsed the AAB guidelines on sex-role stereotyping and has
formed a citizens' committee to view and rate videos. With regard to
employment equity, goals will be set and staffing monitored by department
managers and the Office of the Portrayal of Women. The Corporation has
already completed an analysis of women on French-language radio for 1985-86
and other such studies are planned for 1986-87. |
|
The CAB has also been active since the hearings
in all the areas outlined in the commitments it made at these hearings. It
has canvassed its members for the names of women to serve on CAB boards and
committees and has been in touch with the Advisory Council on the Status of
Women regarding qualified women who might be used by broadcasters as
commentators and experts on current issues. The CRTC has been informed that
the Societal Issues Committee of the CAB will address a number of matters,
including revised guidelines on sex-role stereotyping, the possibility of the
CAB serving as an employment clearing house, and the feasibility of the
establishment of a Broadcast Council. The CAB has also begun compiling
material to produce non-sexist language guidelines. It has included the CAB
guidelines with the code on the advertising of feminine hygiene products. The
CAB has reiterated its commitment to working with other organizations in
developing and financing a second study comparable to the ERIN research. |
|
The CAF has established, among other initiatives,
a Committee on Sexuality and Violence to study not only violence associated
with women in general, but more particularly violence in movie advertisements
and advertising for children, as well as in instances where sexuality and
violence are linked. Further, the Broadcast Code for Advertising to Children
is under revision and proposed changes will incorporate the sex-role
stereotyping guidelines, as well as references to violence. The CAF is also
reviewing the mandate of the proposed Advisory Panel on Sex-Role Stereotyping
to determine the most effective means of ensuring public input in the
handling of complaints. The CAF is also a subscriber to research being
conducted with respect to sex and sexuality in programming, editorial content
and advertising. The television code of standards for the advertising of
feminine hygiene products has been revised and includes a statement on the
portrayal of women in advertising. |
|
MediaWatch has undertaken to continue its
activities with respect to sex-role stereotyping in the media. It proposes to
continue to act as a catalyst for public awareness, to be a resource centre
for sex-role stereotyping information and to assist volunteer groups in their
efforts to monitor or evaluate the effectiveness of the industries'
self-regulatory guidelines. |
|
Closing Remarks: For its part, the
Commission remains firmly committed to ensuring that progress continues on
the elimination of sex-role stereotyping from the broadcast media. It will
continue to maintain an internal committee on sex-role stereotyping to
supervise, under the direction of the Executive Committee, the implementation
of all commitments made by the various parties involved, as well as the
CRTC's own recommendations. The Commission intends to meet on a yearly basis
with the CBC, the CAB and the CAF to receive a report on efforts made to
eliminate SRS and to hear yearly plans for continued progress. It will review
the semi-annual report on complaints and their disposition from the
above-mentioned three bodies and determine the adequacy of the process for
the public, and will continue not only to act as a mechanism for resolving
unsatisfied complaints but also will deal with all complaints directed to
non-CAB licensees. |
|
The CRTC will include in its annual report a
status report on the issue of SRS, including industry actions, the nature and
number of complaints received and progress in the implementation of
commitments and recommendations. |
|
The Commission will also wish to review with
broadcasters, at licence renewal time, the efforts they are making in this
area. This will be especially important for those broadcasters who did not
respond to Public Notice CRTC 1983-211, a list of which will be released
shortly so that they have adequate notice to prepare themselves for a review
of their performance in this area at subsequent hearings. |
|
The Commission notes the gathering momentum
towards change in Canadian society, as evidenced in part by the new
employment equity legislation recently introduced by the government which
will affect many of its licensees. It also notes the considerable increase in
qualified women graduating from broadcast educational institutions in numbers
equal to or exceeding those of men, and is of the opinion that, with the
continued commitment of its licensees to change, the time is propitious for
real progress to be made. The advertisers also acknowledge that women's roles
in the world are changing, and that it is in the advertisers' self-interest
to respond to that change. |
|
The Commission acknowledges that any solution or
initiatives suggested in this document cannot deal with non-Canadian
programming or commercials received over-the-air, by satellite, or from the
many cable systems across the country. It does urge its broadcast licensees,
therefore, to adhere to the industry guidelines on sex-role stereotyping when
purchasing foreign programming for their schedules. |
|
The Commission commends its licensees, industry
representatives and members of the public who have spent resources and many
hours of voluntary labour in their efforts to make self-regulation effective.
While much remains to be done, the Commission realizes that overcoming
obstacles to the equality of women in Canadian society and accelerating the
process of change requires a long-term commitment and an on-going cooperative
effort, with industry, the public and the regulator all playing their part.
It requests the cooperation of all involved for a renewed commitment to a
more realistic portrayal of women in radio and on television in programming
and commercials and ultimately to the elimination of all sex-role
stereotyping from the Canadian broadcasting media. |
|
Fernand Bélisle
Secretary General |
|
|
|
APPENDIX A
|
|
CAB, AAB and CBC Guidelines on Sex-Role Stereotyping
|
|
A. Canadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB): Private Broadcasting
Voluntary Guidelines on Sex-Role Stereotyping
|
|
1. Broadcast programming should reflect an awareness of, and
sensitivity to the problems related to sex-role stereotyping. |
|
2. Broadcasters should recognize the changing interaction of
men and women in today's society. |
|
3. Broadcasting should reflect a contemporary family
structure, showing all persons as equally supporting participants in
management and household tasks, and as equal beneficiaries of the positive
attributes of family life. |
|
4. Broadcasters should reflect the wide spectrum of Canadian
life, portraying people of various ages, backgrounds and appearances,
actively pursuing a wide range of interests. |
|
5. Broadcasters should refrain from the exploitation of men
and women, and reflect the intellectual and emotional equality of both sexes,
in programming. |
|
6. Broadcasters should exercise their best efforts to use
language of an inclusive nature in their programming, by avoiding whenever
possible expressions which relate to only one gender. |
|
7. Broadcasting should reflect a realistic balance in the use
of men and women as voice-overs and as experts and authorities. |
|
8. Broadcasters should attempt to increase the visibility and
involvement of women in broadcasting, both on and off the air. |
|
9. Broadcasters should exercise sensitivity to and be aware
of the problem of sex-role stereotyping in the acquisition of programming
material or rights. |
|
10. Broadcasters should support the voluntary initiatives of
the advertising industry in relation to the issue of sex-role stereotyping,
through the Advertising Advisory Board, and that wherever possible,
broadcasters should cooperate with locally organized and nationally conducted
campaigns of the Advertising Advisory Board (AAB). |
|
B. Advertising Advisory Board (AAB): Advisory Committee on Sex-Role
Stereotyping: Guidelines
|
|
The following "positive action statements" were adopted by
the Task Force as guidelines to encourage more realistic portrayals of men
and women in advertising messages. It should be noted that while the majority
of the complaints are related to the portrayal of women, the concern of the
Committee is sex-role stereotyping of both sexes. |
|
1. Advertising should recognize the changing roles of men and
women in today's society and reflect the broad range of occupations for all. |
|
2. Advertising should reflect the contemporary family
structure showing men, women and children as equally supportive participants
in home management and household tasks, and as equal beneficiaries of the
positive attributes of family life. |
|
3. Advertising, in keeping with the nature of the market and
the product, should reflect the wide spectrum of Canadian life, portraying
men and women of various ages, backgrounds and appearances actively pursuing
a wide range of interests, sports, hobbies and business, as well as
home-centered activities. |
|
4. Advertising should reflect the realities of life in terms
of the intellectual and emotional equality of the sexes by showing men and
women as comparably capable, resourceful, self-confident, intelligent,
imaginative and independent. |
|
5. Advertising should emphasize positive personal benefits
derived from products or services and should avoid portraying any excessive
dependence on/or excessive need for them. |
|
6. Advertising should not exploit women or men purely for
attention-getting purposes. Their presence should be relevant to the
advertised product. |
|
7. Advertising should reflect the contemporary usage of
non-sexist language, e.g. hours or working hours, rather than man hours,
synthetic, rather than man-made, business executives rather than business men
or business women. |
|
8. Advertising should portray men and women as users, buyers
and decision-makers, both for "big-ticket" items and major services, as well
as small items. |
|
9. Advertising should reflect a realistic balance in the use
of women, both as voice-overs and as experts and authorities. |
|
C. CBC Guidelines
|
|
In December 1979, the CBC's Board of Directors
adopted a program policy which requires the CBC to accept as part of its
mandate the need to reflect the role of women in Canadian society. To ensure
implementation of this policy, the Corporation also prepared language
guidelines: |
|
Portrayal of Women in CBC Programming -- Policy Statement
|
|
The CBC accepts as part of its mandate the need to reflect in
its programming the role of women in Canadian society and to examine its
social and political consequences. The CBC believes that its programming
should also contribute to the understanding of issues affecting women. |
|
In applying this policy, CBC programming should: |
|
1. avoid the use of demeaning sexual stereotypes and sexist
language; |
|
2. reflect women and their interests in the reporting and
discussion of current events; |
|
3. recognize the full participation of women in Canadian
society; |
|
4. seek women's opinions on the full range of public issues. |
|
Language Guidelines -- Portrayal of Women in CBC Programs
|
|
Words can be the symbols of deeply rooted cultural
assumptions. The way language is now used tends to relegate women to
secondary status in our society. Rules of correct grammatical usage, like
rules of social conduct, are not immutable and may change to reflect changing
social mores. The following guidelines are not lists of proscribed words.
They provide examples which can broaden the use of language while avoiding
sexist bias. The guidelines should be applied with awareness and judgment. |
|
1. Include all people in general references by substituting
neutral words and phrases for "man-words". |
|
Examples: |
|
INSTEAD OF man-made
man's achievements
mankind
career women |
SUBSTITUTE articifial, synthetic
human achievements
humanity, the human race or people
name the
profession |
|
2. Avoid assuming that everyone in a group is male -- or
female. |
|
Examples: |
"the men in the cabinet"
"the boys in the caucus"
"the girls
in the hairdressing shop"
"the doctor, he"
"the nurse, she" |
|
(Examples taken
off-air) |
|
3. Refer to women and men equally and make references
consistent. |
|
Examples: |
|
NOT
Mr. Sam Jones and Mary Smith |
RATHER
Sam Jomes and Mary Smith or Mr.
Sam Jones and (appropriate title) Mary Smith |
|
4. Avoid using "man" or "woman" as suffix or prefix in job
titles. |
|
Examples: |
|
NOT
mail boy
policewoman or man
steward, stewardess |
RATHER
courrier, messenger
police officer
flight attendant |
|
5. Use parallel language when referring to people by sex. |
|
Examples: |
|
NOT
man-and wife
ladies and men
men's team and girls' team |
RATHER
husband and wife
women and men, ladies and gentlemen, girls and boys
men's teams
and women's teams |
|
6. Avoid offensive or patronizing language, tokenism. |
|
Examples: |
|
NOT
the little lady
better half
libber, women's lib |
RATHER
wife, spouse
" "
feminist, women's movement |
|
7. Grant equal respect to women and men. Do not describe men
by professional position and women by physical attributes. |
|
Examples: |
|
NOT
Sam Jones is a successful lawyer and his wife is a charming blonde. |
RATHER
Find out what his wife (name) is involved in. |
|
8. Use generic titles or descriptions for both women and men. |
|
Examples: |
|
NOT
woman manager
male secretary |
RATHER
manager
secretary |
|
9. Base communication on qualities that are pertinent to the
story. Avoid words and visuals which emphasize physical features and clothes
unless they are germane, and unless comparable terms would be used regardless
of the subject's sex. Use the same standards for men and women in deciding
whether to mention marital and family situations. In other words, write and
edit with a sense of equality, appropriateness and dignity for both sexes. |
|
APPENDIX B
|
|
Recommendations of the Task Force on Sex-Role Stereotyping as published
in Images of Women
|
|
To the CRTC
|
|
1. The CRTC should monitor and assess the initiatives taken
by the broadcasting and advertising industry over a two-year period, by: |
|
a. periodically monitoring broadcast commercials and programs
for sex-role stereotyping; |
|
b. requesting and assessing interim reports from industry
committees responsible for self-regulation; |
|
c. assessing complaints received both by the Commission and
through the response system instituted by the government; and |
|
d. at the end of two years, publishing the results of its
findings in a report and creating an appropriate public forum for its
discussion prior to the consideration of further action by the Commission. |
|
2. The CRTC should require all broadcast licensees to submit
periodic reports to the Commission on their progress and initiatives in
dealing with the problem of sex-role stereotyping. |
|
3. The CRTC should take initiatives to eliminate abusive
comments on, or abusive pictorial representation of, either sex in broadcast
content (AM, FM, and television). The Commission should also discourage the
portrayal of gratuitous violence against women. |
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4. The CRTC should make Images of Women widely available. In
particular, the report should be distributed to broadcast licensees, women's
groups, and those who made submissions to the Task Force. |
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To the CBC
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1. The Corporation should ensure that its programming staff
become familar with and adhere to the Corporation's policies and guidelines
pertaining to the portrayal of women in programming. |
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2. The Corporation should conduct comparative studies of the
portrayal of women on both its English-language and French-language services,
and make the results of these studies available to the public. |
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3. In its future studies on women and employment, the
Corporation should consider those employed on a contract basis. |
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To the CAB and Private Broadcasters
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Several recommendations were addressed to the Canadian
Association of Broadcasters (CAB), which represents some 300 Canadian
broadcasters, as well as to private Canadian broadcasters in general. The CAB
itself, during the course of the Task Force meetings, proposed that its Board
of Directors recommend to the 1982 general association meeting that its Code
of Ethics be amended to include specific clauses on sex-role stereotyping in
radio and television programming. |
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1. The CAB should adopt proposed changes to the CAB's Code of
Ethics as association policy. |
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2. The mandate of the CAB's standing committee on sex-role
stereotyping should include education, encouraging the cooperation and
participation of member stations, the handling of complaints, and preparation
of interim public reports. |
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3. The CAB should outline to the CRTC how it proposes to
educate and sensitize its members with respect to sex-role stereotyping. |
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4. The CAB committee should encourage members to increase the
visibility and involvement of women both on- and off-air. [The latter issue
was not, however, considered a criterion by the Commission in determining
whether self-regulation had been effective.] |
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5. All CAB-member broadcasters should participate in the
implementation of the association's proposal for self-regulation, and
cooperate in making it effective. |
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6. All private broadcasters should familiarize themselves
with the programming proposals as set out in Images of Women, and adopt the
applicable programming recommendations. |
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7. All private broadcasters should exercise sensitivity to,
and awareness of, the problem of sex-role stereotyping in acquiring
programming material or rights. |
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To Advertisers
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1. The advertising industry should encourage its members to
participate in the implementation of the industry's proposal for
self-regulation and cooperate with the industry to make self-regulation
effective. |
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2. The industry should review and, where appropriate, modify
its codes concerning the portrayal of individuals (particularly women) in
advertising, after gaining experience with the voluntary guidelines and the
self-regulatory process for the two-year period. |
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To the Public
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The Task Force also addressed the public, urging it to voice
its concerns and complaints about what it finds objectionable in broadcast
programming and commercials. |
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To the Federal Government
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1. The federal government should accept the principle that
programming on the Canadian broadcasting system be reflective of the interest
of both sexes. |
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2. The government should establish and maintain an effective
response system, such as a toll-free number or a postage-free mailing system
to receive public complaints about sex-role stereotyping in radio and
television programming or commercials, which would supplement the
self-regulatory initiatives established by the broadcasting and advertising
industries. Records should be maintained indicating the nature of the
complaints received and the system's existence should be widely publicized. |
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3. The federal government should encourage and finance the
development of a methodology by which progress in the area of sex-role
stereotyping in programs and commercials can be measured. This work should be
undertaken or commissioned by an appropriate body (such as Status of Women
Canada, or the Department of the Secretary of State's Women's Program). Such
studies should not duplicate those undertaken by the advertising or
broadcasting industries, as set out in their proposals for self-regulation. |
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4. The government should compile and periodically update
comprehensive regional and national directories of women experts, to be made
available as a resource to any broadcast licensee, using the Department of
the Secretary of State's Women's Program or a comparable body. |
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5. The federal government should note the fact that women are
under-represented as members both of the CRTC and the CBC Board of Directors,
and consider this when appointments are made to these publicly-funded
agencies, to ensure more balanced representation. [Subsequently, the
Commission decided not to use employment as a criterion for determining the
effectiveness of the self-regulatory period.] |
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Note 1 -
The Portrayal of Sex Roles in Programming and
Advertising On Canadian Television and Radio: Summary Report 1985
The
Portrayal of Sex Roles in Canadian Television Programming
The Portrayal of
Sex Roles in Canadian Radio Programming
The Portrayal of Sex Roles in
Canadian Television Advertising
The Portrayal of Sex Roles in Canadian Radio
Advertising |