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Barbie deployed to close 'Dream Gap' for young girls

Barbie will work to help young girls close the so-called "Dream Gap". 

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Los Angeles, United States
Wed, October 10, 2018 Published on Oct. 10, 2018 Published on 2018-10-10T11:18:06+07:00

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A wall of Barbie dolls in the Mattel display at the annual Toy Fair in New York. The doll's maker Mattel on October 9, 2018, announced a sweeping campaign in collaboration with university researchers to teach young girls to believe in themselves, and not to buy into sexist gender stereotypes. A wall of Barbie dolls in the Mattel display at the annual Toy Fair in New York. The doll's maker Mattel on October 9, 2018, announced a sweeping campaign in collaboration with university researchers to teach young girls to believe in themselves, and not to buy into sexist gender stereotypes. (AFP/Stan Honda)

O

ver the years, Barbie has taken on many roles: beach beauty, scientist, even president of the United States. And now, she will work to help young girls close the so-called "Dream Gap". 

The doll's maker Mattel on Tuesday announced a sweeping campaign in collaboration with university researchers to teach young girls to believe in themselves, and not to buy into sexist gender stereotypes.

"Research has identified that starting at age five, many girls are less likely than boys to view their own gender as smart and begin to lose confidence in their own competence," Mattel said in a statement.

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The company will fund research and work on "rallying a community around supporting girls" through its multi-year Dream Gap Project.

Mattel unveiled a new ad featuring young girls holding placards that read "Close the Dream Gap" and ties into Barbie's "You Can Be Anything" campaign.

The brand is working with researchers at New York University, and hopes to extend that initiative in other partnerships around the world. 

It also will highlight "at least 10 empowering female role models each year globally."

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Though Barbie is often criticized for perpetuating negative stereotypes with her impossibly lean physique, the brand has worked hard in recent years to portray a modern image.

In early 2016, the California-based company launched Barbie versions in three different body shapes -- tall, petite and curvy -- and in seven different skin tones.

This year's featured career is robotics engineer. Another new line  showcased "Inspiring Women" such as aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart and black NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson.

"Since 1959, Barbie has inspired the limitless potential in every girl," said Lisa McKnight, general manager and senior vice president for Barbie at Mattel.

"We believe that empowering them at a young age is a catalyst to unlocking their full potential."

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In July, Mattel announced that it was cutting 2,200 jobs after reporting another steep quarterly loss, despite rising Barbie sales. 

The company, which also produces Matchbox cars and Fisher-Price educational toys, has faced tough competition from video game makers and other electronic toys.

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