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Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the EuropeanEducation and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.

Identifying Systemic Biases, Economic Constraints, and Algorithmic Influences on Representation

Why Representation Remains Uneven

Representation across the European media landscape remains limited and uneven. Despite growing awareness around diversity and inclusion, deep-rooted structural barriers continue to shape who gets to lead, who has access to opportunities, and whose voices are amplified.

From biased hiring practices and economic inequality to opaque algorithmic systems, these barriers restrict access for women, ethnic minorities, people with disabilities, and other marginalised groups.

These challenges not only limit opportunities for creators, but also influence which stories are seen, valued, and shared in society.

Biased Hiring Practices

Despite pledges to the contrary, many media and tech firms continue to hire in ways that disadvantage under-represented groups:

  • In a survey of 14,000 tech professionals (including 4,000 Europe-based recruiters), 65 % admitted their own hiring decisions were influenced by unconscious or conscious bias, confirming that discriminatory practices for gigs persist even among those responsible for building teams.
  • Freelance marketplaces increasingly rely on AI-driven matching systems that perpetuate biases and inequalities embedded in their training data and algorithms. One large-scale study of over 44,000 profiles found that women— especially Black and Asian women—and younger candidates were significantly less likely to be recommended.

Algorithmic and platform biases

Digital platforms, once hailed as inclusive arenas, often reinforce existing inequalities through hidden algorithms and uneven moderation:

  • Research on Spanish youth finds that platforms like Twitch and Discord benefit content by cisgender, white, heterosexual men, reinforcing gender stereotypes and excluding non-conforming identities.
  • “Algorithmic misogynoir” studies reveal that content-moderation systems disproportionately suppress Black women’s voices—removing or de-prioritising their posts—due to entrenched biases in both code and policy.

The Impact on Society

Systemic hiring discrimination and algorithmic bias do more than limit professional opportunities — they shape the stories and perspectives that circulate in society.

By influencing who gets visibility and whose stories are considered valuable, these systems reinforce dominant narratives while excluding the lived experiences of underrepresented communities.

This narrows the diversity of perspectives available to the public, reinforces harmful stereotypes, and weakens efforts toward genuine social inclusion and democratic dialogue.

A truly inclusive media landscape requires more than visibility campaigns or diversity statements.

Without addressing structural inequality, biased hiring systems, and discriminatory algorithms, many marginalised communities will continue to face barriers to participation and representation.

Creating fairer digital spaces means ensuring that all communities have equal opportunities not only to consume media, but also to create it, shape it, and lead it.

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