Fred KakoozaSamuel Kazibwe2025-07-082025-07-082025Kakooza, F & Kazibwe, S. (2025). Digital Safety: Perspectives from Women Journalists in Uganda.doi:10.1108/978-1-83608-406-820251012https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11951/1700Book chapterThe Internet has been recognised as a tool or space for universal access to information that fosters diversity and plurality of voices. Yet in this space, journalists have been a regular target of online attacks, intimidation, and bullying that threaten the diversity of voices and information. Women journalists face a double burden of risk based on their gender, such that the safety and security of women journalists require a paradigm shift from focusing on physical harm alone to considering digital and online security as well. This chapter explores Ugandan women journalists’ safety and security experiences in online environments and how women journalists negotiate their online media environments to deliver journalistic work. Discussed through the media affordance and objectification theoretical perspectives, the findings indicate that women journalists use digital spaces as an enabler to their profession but are challenged with threats, violations, and harassment online. We emphasise continuous training of women journalists on digital safety and security, including rallying media organisations to ensure online safety for women journalists.enWomen journalistssocial mediadigital spacesdigital safetydigital securityonline harassmentpress freedomDigital Safety: Perspectives from Women Journalists in UgandaBook chapter