Nominations open for Campaign for Gender Balance Blog Awards

I was delighted when the Campaign for Gender Balance asked me to help judge the first Gender Balance Blog Awards – and relieved, because the dearth of women blogging about politics has had an uncivilising effect on the internet. Too many established bloggers, unconsciously or otherwise, consider the web a perfectly egalitarian place where women suffer no discrimination and should not expect special treatment.

Unfortunately, like every other utopia, that meritocracy simply doesn’t exist. Call it an innate unwillingness to pronounce on subjects in which we don’t have a doctorate, blame it on a lack of time, point to the lack of women at the highest levels of politics – whatever the cause, and despite the best efforts of a few individuals, the political blogosphere is still dominated by men. On a few non-Liberal Democrat blogs, scepticism about female bloggers has hardened into outright misogyny.

So the judges – Jo Swinson MP, Ros Harper, Olly Grender, James Graham, Baroness Jane Bonham-Carter and me, an editor at the Guardian’s Comment is Free – are looking for entries in four categories, of which we will judge three: the best blog and blog posting by a woman Lib Dem and the best blog by a woman outside of the party. The fourth category, the people’s choice, will be chosen by you in a popular vote.

Nominations close on Friday, February 1st, and the shortlist will be published a week later. After you’ve had a chance to vote, the winners will be announced at Spring Conference in Liverpool.

If you already have a blog, tell us about it. If you don’t, why not start one now? Rarely has politics been so interesting. With a new Lib Dem leader, an embattled Prime Minister, financial turmoil and the polls going haywire, the time is ripe to weigh in. If a voice over your shoulder is whispering that you have nothing to say, then hush it. Cultivating opinions, and defending them, is the sine qua non of politics, and that’s exactly what blogging is all about. Shame we can’t call them the Orange Prizes, though.

* Ros Taylor is an editor on the Guardian’s Comment is Free website. To submit a nomination to the awards, visit the Campaign for Gender Balance website.

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16 Comments

  • James Graham 20th Dec '07 - 11:10am

    Jennie – this is all the more reason for an awards like this, the fundamental aim of which is to promote women bloggers, and one of the main reasons why we deliberately chose to have a category that was open to non-Lib Dems. Nominations are now open, so why not tell us who you think should be included?

  • James Graham 20th Dec '07 - 11:18am

    Great!

  • I’m afraid I find this sort of thing faintly ridiculous. I’m not sure blogging has much to do with gender. Surely the most disadvantaged in this area must be the elderly (lack of knowledge) the ‘working classes’ (lack of money) and some members of minorities (lack of confidence).

  • James Graham 20th Dec '07 - 1:17pm

    Matt, as I said to Jennie: name names! 🙂

    Martin: this initiative is about profile raising and encouragment not “disadvantage” – Jennie’s comments, if anything, point to the value an initiative like this for correcting a perception that the blogosphere is male-dominated. Sure, there are other “groups” we might want to encourage, but you can hardly blame the Campaign for Gender Balance for tackling the gender angle!

  • James Graham 20th Dec '07 - 5:10pm
  • Geoffrey Payne 20th Dec '07 - 8:43pm

    I would like to nominate Jo Hayes, my personal favourite. It helps that I agree with her most of the time, and she puts her case better than I can manage for myself.
    I like to read Meral Ece and of course Linda Jack – who cannot help but say exactly what she thinks, which I find refreshing! I rely on the links in Lib Dem Voice, and I am not sure there are so many links from here to female bloggers, although if the links are proportionate then fair enough.
    I like Jo Christies blog as well.
    Apologies if I am missing anyone, I look forward to finding out who I missed.

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