Lego has announced plans to remove gender bias from its products, after a study commissioned by the brand found that girls are hindered by “unequal and restrictive” attitudes towards creativity and play.
Although the Danish toy maker did not outline specific changes to its products or marketing, it announced Monday that it has committed to ensuring they are “free of gender bias and harmful stereotypes.”
LEGO has launched a new campaign titled ‘Ready for Girls’ to celebrate the UN’s International Day of the Girl. Credit: Courtesy Lego
Published to coincide with the UN’s International Day of The Girl, the report also found that parents were almost five times more likely to encourage girls to play dress-up than boys, and around four times more likely to encourage girls to dance or cook and bake. Conversely, parents were far more likely to encourage boys to play coding games or partake in sports.
Lego said in a press release there was a “need for society to rebuild perceptions, actions and words to support the creative empowerment of all children.”
“The benefits of creative play such as building confidence, creativity and communication skills are felt by all children and yet we still experience age-old stereotypes that label activities as only being suitable for one specific gender,” said Julia Goldmin, Lego Group’s chief marketing officer, in a statement.
Elsewhere in the study, researchers found that most parents imagined a man when asked to think about various professions — regardless of whether they had a daughter or not. The gender bias was most pronounced when it came to professions like engineering, which 89% of parents pictured as more of a man’s job. They were also over five times more likely to think of athletes and scientists as men.
11 year old Mahiru Suzuki, a Japanese schoolgirl who created a marching band, is one of the young women featured in the campaign. Credit: Courtesy Lego
Committing to making Lego “more inclusive,” the brand also announced a new campaign titled “Ready for Girls,” which celebrates female creativity. A series of accompanying short films spotlights the achievements of girls and young women including Fatima Alkaabi, the “youngest inventor” in the United Arab Emirates, and 11-year-old Chelsea Phaire, who founded a charity providing art supplies to disadvantaged children in America.
Goldmin said, “We know we have a role to play in putting this right, and this campaign is one of several initiatives we are putting in place to raise awareness of the issue and ensure we make Lego play as inclusive as possible.”
Source: www.cnn.com