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InterviewHer

@interview_her

Connecting the Media with Women Experts on Conflict, Peace and Security.

A Project of @NobelWomen.

ID: 1089983631357923328

linkhttps://interview-her.com calendar_today28-01-2019 20:28:43

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Women experts, we want to hear from you! 📣 InterviewHer is expanding its expert directory and looking for women across ALL fields. Want to share your expertise? Know someone who should? Submit your details today: ow.ly/1rtl50V9pIE

Women experts, we want to hear from you! 📣

InterviewHer is expanding its expert directory and looking for women across ALL fields. Want to share your expertise? Know someone who should? Submit your details today: ow.ly/1rtl50V9pIE
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Who gets heard in peace & security media? Men dominate op-eds & expert citations. Women—and particularly women of color—remain vastly underrepresented. This #InternationalWomensDay, learn how journalists & organizations can platform diverse voices: ow.ly/YrMb50V9qcf

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Women’s rights are advancing—but so is the backlash. 30 years after the Beijing Declaration, activists like Nobel laureate @LeymahGbowee, an InterviewHer expert, are speaking out: "We must stand up, speak up, and show up!" ow.ly/FOCS50VgyY7

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Who gets seen? Who gets heard? Shoutout to BBC News (World) — challenging media orgs to represent women & marginalized voices fairly. At InterviewHer, this is the work we live every day. Learn more: ow.ly/Kfsc50VsKS8

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Women are frontline agents of change — leading, fighting, solving. Yet, just 20% of experts quoted in the media are women. We connect journalists to women experts driving change in conflict, human rights, and democracy: interview-her.com/about-us/

Women are frontline agents of change — leading, fighting, solving. 

Yet, just 20% of experts quoted in the media are women. We connect journalists to women experts driving change in conflict, human rights, and democracy: interview-her.com/about-us/
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🚨#Myanmar military junta continues attacking civilians with airstrikes, targeting villages, IDP camps, schools, hospitals & religious sites. 🔴 Intl community must enforce embargoes on aviation fuel, arms, dual-use goods, and sanction weapon suppliers. bit.ly/3XNvrl4

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An estimated one million protested around the world Saturday in the largest anti-Trump demonstrations since his return to office.

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The stories we tell—and who gets to tell them—shape how the world sees itself. Your voice matters. So does your byline. ow.ly/9JBS50Vyaaf #InterviewHer #WomenInJournalism

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Media professionals—how often do you see women experts quoted, booked, or aired? This survey is a chance to say what we all know: it’s still not enough: ow.ly/sUxy50VyaAl

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Leymah Gbowee’s foundation is transforming lives across Liberia—and she’s doing it quietly, powerfully, and without fanfare: ow.ly/9vfp50VHnXT We’re proud to have her as one of our experts on InterviewHer. 👏

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Media still quotes men far more than women. That’s not just a sourcing problem. It’s a democracy problem. This piece by Shari Graydon explains why it matters—and why journalists must change how they source. We’re here to help: ow.ly/pcak50VHnZG

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Why do so many articles on national security only quote men? In “Behold, the marticle,” Alexandra Bell & Kelsey Davenport name the problem—and show how to fix it: ow.ly/6RGm50VNYRn

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Need a source? A panelist? A credible voice? Use InterviewHer’s Find an Expert tool to reach women & gender-diverse voices across every sector. Your request goes straight to the expert: ow.ly/AWSY50VNYW6

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“You’re probably not quoting enough women.” Not a dig. Just a fact. CJR breaks down how gender bias in sourcing persists—and how journalists like Ed Yong and Anna Fifield are owning it and doing better: ow.ly/8ItS50VNZ0j

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“As a descendent of people who were denied the right to read, to now have the opportunity to serve and lead the institution that is our national symbol of knowledge, is a historic moment.” -Dr. Carla Hayden on being sworn in as the first woman, and the first African-American, as

“As a descendent of people who were denied the right to read, to now have the opportunity to serve and lead the institution that is our national symbol of knowledge, is a historic moment.”

-Dr. Carla Hayden on being sworn in as the first woman, and the first African-American, as
Sara Wahedi (@sarawahedi) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Every time I prepare slides on Afghanistan, it’s become unbearable to search “Afghan girls education.” Most of these girls haven’t seen a classroom in nearly 3 years. Told to pursue any dream - then abandoned. But we won’t give up. We’re working quietly, in the shadows.

Every time I prepare slides on Afghanistan, it’s become unbearable to search “Afghan girls education.”

Most of these girls haven’t seen a classroom in nearly 3 years. Told to pursue any dream - then abandoned.

But we won’t give up. We’re working quietly, in the shadows.
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“We were once told that we couldn’t participate in the peace negotiations because there weren’t enough chairs in the room. We’ve heard the most ridiculous excuses.” – Muna Luqman, peacebuilder from Yemen ow.ly/UaYv50VUWVs

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Afghan girls are banned from schools. Afghan women are banned from universities. But no one can ban their voices. At InterviewHer, we highlight Afghan women experts journalists can speak to—on education, rights, and resistance: ow.ly/s9eu50VYMOw

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As threats to women in digital spaces grow more sophisticated, experts like Eva Galperin and Ifeoluwa Elegbe are calling for coordinated responses, from stronger regulation to transparency and corporate reform: ow.ly/2L8H50VYMQI