Org | Common People |
---|---|
Netflix | Bela Bajaria |
Gang, Tyre, Ramer & Brown, Inc. | Tara Kole |
MusiCares | Stasia Washington |
Women In Film advocates for and advances the careers of women working in the screen industries – to achieve parity and transform culture. WIF believes that… Gender parity – defined by equal opportunity, pay and representation – is a requirement of healthy civil society. Despite progress, systemic bias in the screen industries persists; it manifests in forms both conscious and unconscious. This bias is intersectional across race, ethnicity, ability, age, class, sexual orientation and gender identity. This bias informs the decision-making process of both men and women. Women helping women cultivates the next generation. Awareness of systemic imbalance is the precedent to Culture Change. Culture Change is the precedent to Policy change. Parity is only possible when decision-makers change culture and policy, and hold themselves, their teams, and their businesses accountable for its implementation. Parity is good business. Parity, inclusivity, and equal representation are non-negotiable requirements of sustainable media businesses.
Org | Common People |
---|---|
Netflix | Bela Bajaria |
Gang, Tyre, Ramer & Brown, Inc. | Tara Kole |
MusiCares | Stasia Washington |