Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Oscars academy sets minimum diversity rules for best picture prize

HOLLYWOOD's motion picture academy unveiled strict new eligibility rules to boost diversity among best picture Oscars nominees and the wider movie industry in a landmark announcement on Tuesday (8).

From 2024, all films hoping to win Tinseltown's most coveted prize will need to either employ a minimum number of cast, crew and administrative employees from under-represented backgrounds, or directly tackle themes affecting those communities.


The groundbreaking move comes after years of criticism over a lack of diversity among the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' members, and among the Oscar nominees and winners they select.

While the Academy has already taken steps to diversify its membership, Tuesday's new rules mark a more aggressive bid to re-shape Hollywood's broader performance on diversity.

"We believe these inclusion standards will be a catalyst for long-lasting, essential change in our industry," said president David Rubin and CEO Dawn Hudson in a statement.

Under the new rules, films vying for best picture will need to comply with at least two of four criteria designed to improve hiring practices and representation on and off screen.

The first criteria requires the movie to feature either a prominent actor from an underrepresented group, 30 percent of its smaller roles from minorities, or to address issues surrounding these communities as its main theme.

The second stipulates that behind-the-scenes senior leadership or technical crew members must be drawn from historically disadvantaged groups, which also include women, LGBT and disabled communities.

The final two measures concern offering internships and training to underrepresented workers, and diversity in the movie's marketing and distribution teams.

Push for diversity

Since 2015 and the #OscarsSoWhite social media campaign, the Academy has made concerted efforts to broaden its membership.

The board of governors vowed to double the number of women and non-white members by 2020, following calls to boycott the glitzy Oscars.

The Academy surpassed those membership goals, with 45 per cent of this year's intake women, and 36 per cent minorities.

The latest move is the product of a new diversity task force announced in June -- weeks after mass anti-racism protests swept the US following the killing of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis.

The standards are based on those already employed by Britain's BAFTA, and "are designed to encourage equitable representation on and off screen in order to better reflect the diversity of the movie-going audience", said the statement.

Films contending for the best picture Oscar in 2022 and 2023 will not be bound by the rules, but will need to submit to the Academy confidential data on the movies' diversity based on the new criteria.

The Academy also recently began hosting a series of panel discussions on racist tropes and harmful stereotypes in Hollywood films.

More For You

Pakistan-independence-day-Getty

People click photographs beside an unmanned combat aerial vehicle on display at a military exhibition during Pakistan's Independence Day celebrations in Islamabad on August 14, 2025. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

US aims to build economic partnerships with Pakistan: Rubio

US secretary of state Marco Rubio said the United States wanted to explore areas of economic cooperation with Pakistan, including critical minerals and hydrocarbons, as the country marked its independence day on Thursday (14).

Rubio’s greetings came after Pakistan’s army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir’s second visit to the US last week, where he met political and military leaders.

Keep ReadingShow less
Anish Kapoor and Greenpeace take climate protest to North Sea rig

Fake blood stains a giant white fabric backdrop attached to the offshore platform. (Photo: Andrew McConnell / Greenpeace)

Anish Kapoor and Greenpeace take climate protest to North Sea rig

BRITISH Asian artist Anish Kapoor said his work, Butchered, attempts to "bring home the horrors” of fossil fuels to the planet after Greenpeace activists installed it at a gas rig in the North Sea.

Seven climbers boarded and scaled Shell's gas platform Skiff, 45 nautical miles off the Norfolk coast on Wednesday (13).

Keep ReadingShow less
More Malayalis and Tamils 'live abroad than in other Indian states'

Chinmay Tumbe

More Malayalis and Tamils 'live abroad than in other Indian states'

THERE are more speakers of Malayalam and Tamil living outside India than within the country but outside their respective home states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu, according to a study by an Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad (IIMA) faculty member.

Based on Census 2011 data, the research shows that Punjabi speakers are the most dispersed linguistic group in the country, while the Bengali diaspora – both internal and international – is the least dispersed. The findings are part of a paper by IIMA’s Chinmay Tumbe, recently published in the journal Sociological Bulletin.

Keep ReadingShow less
NHS appeals for Asian donors to reduce kidney transplant waiting times

South Asian kidney donor Azeem Ahmad

NHS appeals for Asian donors to reduce kidney transplant waiting times

ASIAN patients in the UK face longer waits for kidney transplants due to a shortage of donors from the same ethnic background, new figures revealed.

Around 1,400 people of Asian heritage are currently on the organ transplant waiting list, the highest figure in a decade, data from NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT)showed.

Keep ReadingShow less