Caroline Criado Perez Popular Books

Caroline Criado Perez Biography & Facts

Caroline Emma Criado Perez (born 1984) is a British feminist author, journalist and activist. Her first national campaign, the Women's Room project, aimed to increase the presence of female experts in the media. She opposed the removal of the only woman from British banknotes (other than The Queen), leading to the Bank of England's swift announcement that the image of Jane Austen would appear on the £10 note by 2017. That campaign led to sustained harassment on the social networking website Twitter of Criado Perez and other women; as a result, Twitter announced plans to improve its complaint procedures. Her most recent campaign was for a sculpture of a woman in Parliament Square; the statue of Millicent Fawcett was unveiled in April 2018, as part of the centenary celebrations of the winning of women's suffrage in the United Kingdom. Her 2019 book Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men was a Sunday Times bestseller. Early life and education Born in Brazil, she is the daughter of Carlos Criado Perez, an Argentinian-born businessman and former CEO of the Safeway supermarket chain in the UK, and Alison, an English registered nurse who has worked with Medecins Sans Frontieres on a number of humanitarian aid missions. The family lived in several countries during her childhood, including Spain, Portugal and Taiwan, as well as the UK. When Criado Perez was 11, her father moved to the Netherlands and she began to board at Oundle School, a public school in Northamptonshire, England. She disliked what she described as a bullying culture there. Criado Perez spent a year at university in London, then abandoned a history course. Having developed a passion for opera during her teens, she wanted to become an opera singer, and various jobs subsidised her singing lessons. Criado Perez worked in digital marketing for some years, then studied for an English Literature A-level. She gained a place to study English Language and Literature at Keble College, Oxford as a mature student, graduating from Oxford University in 2012. Study of language and gender and a book by Deborah Cameron discussing gender's relationship to pronouns, led to Criado Perez becoming an active feminist. She was a runner-up in the London Library Student Writing competition in 2012, receiving £1,000 and other prizes. Since then, she worked, in 2012, as an editor for an information and networking portal of the pharmaceutical industry and in 2013 was in the process of completing a master's degree in Gender Studies from the London School of Economics. In a June 2013 profile by journalist Cathy Newman in The Telegraph, Criado Perez commented: "the culture we live in is made up of little tiny sexist acts which you can just ignore but when you think of them collectively you start to see a pattern." Campaigns Female representation in the media In November 2012, with Catherine Smith, she founded the website Women's Room, whose goal is to collect suggestions for female professionals and to convey to journalists to increase the proportion of women in the media. The immediate reason for this development were two features on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme broadcast on consecutive days in October 2012, on the prevention of teenage pregnancies and breast cancer, in which no female expert was interviewed – the interviewers were also male. As a result, presenter John Humphrys had to ask during the latter item: "if you were a woman you would have no hesitation about being screened"? One of the interviewees on the item about teenage pregnancies was Anthony Seldon, the headmaster of Wellington College, a public school. Criado Perez wrote that Seldon might be an authority on contemporary British political history, but not on the immediate subject under discussion. She commented on the rather narrow selection of voices, on social lines as well as gender, in such broadcast debates in early November 2012: "These voices are shaping the debate, and they therefore wield a huge influence over our currently populist public policy. If public policy is going to be so responsive to the media, let's make the media truly representative of the public." On the Wikipedia controversy in April 2013 concerning the creation of a sub-category for American women novelists, she was reported as saying: "It perpetuates the idea that men are the default and don't need to be marked in any way, whereas women are still seen as the outliers." Women on banknotes In another campaign, she criticised the Bank of England's decision to replace Elizabeth Fry with Winston Churchill on the £5 note, which left no women featured on the reverse of bank notes; the Queen is depicted on the front of bank notes, with historically prominent people on the reverse. Dismissing Churchill as "another white man", Criado Perez pointed out that the Equality Act 2010 commits public institutions to "eliminate discrimination", whereas proof the Bank had acted with the required "due regard" was absent because details of the decision-making process were not made public. Criado Perez met Head of Notes Victoria Cleland and Chief Cashier Chris Salmon at the Bank to discuss it. The campaign, which gained the support of 35,000 petitioners, and financial support for a potential legal challenge led Mark Carney, the newly appointed Governor of the Bank of England, to announce that the image of Jane Austen would appear on a new £10 note, replacing that of Churchill. "People have said this was not such a big thing to tackle, but I didn't especially pick on banknotes", Criado Perez commented to The Observer's Vanessa Thorpe. "I just saw the [proposed] new note and thought, 'I am not having this'. And the Bank of England is not a small institution." Jane Austen was not her preferred female historical figure, but Criado Perez still approved of the choice: "She spent her time poking fun at the establishment. All her books are about how women are trapped and misrepresented. It is really sad that she was saying that 200 years ago and I am still having to say that today". In an article in the London Evening Standard in September 2017, Criado Perez wrote that she would donate her first "Austen tenner" to her local women's shelter: "It feels like the right way to end this chapter of my life". Others followed suit, donating their tenners to charities ranging from large ones such as Women's Aid to start-ups such as Bloody Good Period. Harassment on social media This decision by the Bank of England resulted in numerous threats, including threats of rape and murder, made against Criado Perez and other women on Twitter from the day of the Bank of England's announcement in July 2013. At this point, Criado Perez said that she was receiving about 50 such threats each hour, and found somewhat inadequate the suggestion that she fill in an on-line form for Twitter detailing the behaviour she had experienced. At the height of the abuse, Criado Perez "lost half a stone in two days" and "coul.... Discover the Caroline Criado Perez popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Caroline Criado Perez books.

Best Seller Caroline Criado Perez Books of 2024

  • How Not To Be Wrong synopsis, comments

    How Not To Be Wrong

    James OBrien

    'Simply Brilliant' THE SECRET BARRISTER'Passionate and brilliantly argued' DAVID OLUSOGA'An admirably personal guide' MARINA HYDE'Smart, analytical, selfaware and important' ALASTA...

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    How To Get Your Act Together

    Suki Sandhu & Felicity Hassan

    'Obligatory reading for anyone straight, white and male or otherwise who wants to do better but doesn't know where to start.' People Management'A pivotal guide for going from aw...

  • Double Lives synopsis, comments

    Double Lives

    Helen McCarthy

    SHORTLISTED FOR THE WOLFSON HISTORY PRIZE 2021 Shortlisted for the PEN HessellTiltman Prize 2021 Longlisted for the HWA NonFiction Crown 2021 'Fabulous' The Times 'A ...

  • Create a Gender-Balanced Workplace synopsis, comments

    Create a Gender-Balanced Workplace

    Ann Francke

    Equality at work expert Ann Francke reveals how to understand and tackle the damaging consequences of gender imbalance in the workplaceGender balance is first and foremost a busine...

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    Believe. Build. Become.

    Debbie Wosskow & Anna Jones

    UPDATED WITH A NEW CHAPTER POSTPANDEMICWant to be your own boss? Or want to be THE boss? Start here.Believe. Build. Become. is a handson manual designed to help any woman develop t...

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    Der Club der hysterischen Frauen

    Sarah Ramey

    Mal mit Galgenhumor, mal anklagend erzählt Sarah Ramey von ihrer Suche nach einer Diagnose und entwirft dabei zugleich ein medizinischfeministisches Manifest: Was hat unsere Gesund...

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    Spider Woman

    Lady Hale

    Lady Hale is an inspirational figure admired for her historic achievements and for the causes she has championed. Spider Woman is her story. As 'a little girl from a little school ...

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    A History of Masculinity

    Ivan Jablonka & Nathan Bracher

    'Exhilarating . . . a work of scholarship, but also inspiration. . . Go and read Jablonka and change the world' Christina Patterson, Sunday Times'An unexpected bestseller in Franc...

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    How To Be Right

    James OBrien

    The voice of reason in a world that won’t shut up.The Sunday Times BestsellerWinner of the Parliamentary Book AwardsEvery day, James O’Brien listens to people blaming hardworking i...

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    The Art of Innovation

    Ian Blatchford & Tilly Blyth

    Based on the landmark Radio 4 series, this beautifully illustrated modern history of the connections between science and art offers a new perspective on what that relationship ha...

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    How to Work Without Losing Your Mind

    Cate Sevilla

    'Genuinely empowering' Daisy Buchanan'An invaluable guide to surviving professional life' Viv Groskop'Comforting during these uncertain times' Yomi AdegokeAwardwinning journalist a...

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    Growing Out

    Barbara Blake Hannah

    'A gorgeously exuberant account. . . writing that is natural and vivacious . . . a fascinating and hugely enjoyable read.' Bernardine Evaristo, from the IntroductionTravelling over...

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    The Power of Privilege

    June Sarpong

    The death of George Floyd and subsequent Black Lives Matter protests have made clear to everyone the vicious reality of racism that persists today. Many of those privileged enough ...

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    Britons Through Negro Spectacles

    ABC Merriman-Labor

    'We shall therefore confine our walk to Central London where people meet on business during the day, and to West London where they meet for pleasure at night. If you will walk abou...

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    Sequins for a Ragged Hem

    Amryl Johnson

    A beautifully atmospheric memoir and travelogue from poet Amryl Johnson depicting her journey from the UK to Trinidad in the 1980s'Memories demanded that I complete this book. If w...

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    The To-Do List and Other Debacles

    Amy Jones

    'Thrillingly honest, funny, incisive and hopeful, this is the perfect gateway into a discussion on mental health' Marian Keyes'Truly one of the most powerful books about mental hea...

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    The Fleet Street Girls

    Julie Welch

    When Julie Welch called in her first ever football report at the Observer, an entire room of men fell silent. Heart in her mouth, Julie waited for the voice on the other end of the...

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    A Woman Lived Here

    Allison Vale

    'A pretty awesome present for the feminist in your life' Caroline Criado Perez, OBE, author of Do It Like a WomanAt the last count, the Blue Plaque Guide honours 903 Londoners, an...

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    More Orgasms Please

    The Hotbed Collective

    A FRANK, FUNNY AND EMPOWERING CELEBRATION OF FEMALE PLEASUREAn orgasm will help you sleep and keep you looking younger, it doesn’t cost money and isn’t a scarce resource. So why is...

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    Career Girls

    T McGill

    How much has actually changed since women were first allowed to cast off their pinnies and embark on the excitements of office life? Emily is twentytwo years old. She's just ...

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    Strong Female Lead

    Arwa Mahdawi

    'Fascinating . . . the most incredible argument for why a female model of leadership might actually be the more powerful and sustainable one' Scarlett Curtis'A bold, rigorous and l...

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    Unlearning Silence

    Elaine Lin Hering

    Wie man privat und beruflich die eigene Stimme findetEin Platz am Tisch bedeutet nicht, dass Ihre Stimme auch willkommen ist. Zu wissen, dass etwas nicht richtig ist, bedeutet nich...

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    Fears to Fierce

    Brita Fernandez Schmidt

    With a foreword by Gillian Anderson and Jennifer Nadel'A mustread for anyone with big ambitions' VIV GROSKOPFIND MEANINGOWN YOUR POWERTRANSFORM YOUR WORLDBrita Fernandez Schmidt ha...

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    Life, Almost

    Jennie Agg

    'Vital and heartwrenchingly intimate' Leah Hazard'Urgent, fascinating and thoughtprovoking' Julia Bueno'Thoughtfully researched and beautifully written' Pippa VosperAfter losing fo...