GenderIT.org feminist talk
[SPECIAL EDITION] There is no opting out.: Indigenous women in Malaysia and questions of access
There is no opting out. Internet connectivity and information technology are now embodied in our collective shared human condition, cutting across geographical boundaries and different spheres of our lives and identities. As governments move towards e-government, whether you like it or not, you are in a digital system of some kind or other even if you do not have access to the internet.
Feminist talkThere is no opting out.: Indigenous women in Malaysia and questions of access
There is no opting out. Internet connectivity and information technology are now embodied in our collective shared human condition, cutting across geographical boundaries and different spheres of our lives and identities. As governments move towards e-government, whether you like it or not, you are in a digital system of some kind or other even if you do not have access to the internet.
Feminist talk[SPECIAL EDITION] Editatonas: “I edit, therefore I am”
Photograph of Editatona Mujeres Internacionales en la Biblioteca Vasconcelos, México by Wotancito. Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Translated from here
Editatonas: “I edit, therefore I am”
Photograph of Editatona Mujeres Internacionales en la Biblioteca Vasconcelos, México by Wotancito. Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Feminist talk[SPECIAL EDITION] #NiUnaMenos: Politicising the use of technologies
Photograph by TitiNicola, under Creative Commons License Attribution Share Alike from Wikimedia Commons.
Translated from here
#NiUnaMenos: Politicising the use of technologies
Photograph by TitiNicola, under Creative Commons License Attribution Share Alike from Wikimedia Commons.
Feminist talkZimbabwean Reflections on a Feminist Internet
Image Source: Photograph by Fungai Machirori
Feminist talkZimbabwean Reflections on a Feminist Internet
Image Source: Photograph by Fungai Machirori
Feminist talk[COLUMN] Access and Beyond (5): How do we address the gender question?
Image Source: Research ICT Africa. Photograph by C Stork. Location: Mozambique surveys
Feminist talk
[COLUMN] Access and Beyond (5): How do we address the gender question?
Image Source: Research ICT Africa. Photograph by C Stork. Location: Mozambique surveys
Feminist talk
What do women’s rights have to do with the SDGs and the Internet?
Short answer, everything
I recently attended the Sri Lankan Internet Governance Forum (IGF) where I spoke on a panel that discussed the linkages between the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Internet. My intervention was framed around two questions.
- Technology and Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) have been recognized as major drivers for achieving sustainable development and achieving targets across the SDGs. How are women and girls placed in this?
What do women’s rights have to do with the SDGs and the Internet?
Short answer, everything
I recently attended the Sri Lankan Internet Governance Forum (IGF) where I spoke on a panel that discussed the linkages between the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Internet. My intervention was framed around two questions.
- Technology and Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) have been recognized as major drivers for achieving sustainable development and achieving targets across the SDGs. How are women and girls placed in this?
Resisting Aadhaar, Resisting Islamophobia: A critical look at debates and litigation around Aadhaar
Queing up for Aadhar. Image source: By Biswarup Ganguly, 2012 from Wikimedia Commons. CC license Attribution.
Feminist talkResisting Aadhaar, Resisting Islamophobia: A critical look at debates and litigation around Aadhaar
Queing up for Aadhar. Image source: By Biswarup Ganguly, 2012 from Wikimedia Commons. CC license Attribution.
Feminist talk[COLUMN] Access and beyond (4): Gendered barriers to internet use
Image source: author
Connecting the next billion, is rightly so, an important issue in ensuring everyone has the choice to access the internet. Women, and in particular those with low levels of income and education, are more likely to be the unconnected. However, gaining access is one thing, but what are the challenges that limit men and women’s experience of the internet and present a barrier to access? In this penultimate article reflecting on the finding from Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa and Rwanda, we look at the gendered barriers to internet access and use.
Feminist talk[COLUMN] Access and beyond: Gendered barriers to internet use
Image source: author
Connecting the next billion, is rightly so, an important issue in ensuring everyone has the choice to access the internet. Women, and in particular those with low levels of income and education, are more likely to be the unconnected. However, gaining access is one thing, but what are the challenges that limit men and women’s experience of the internet and present a barrier to access? In this penultimate article reflecting on the finding from Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa and Rwanda, we look at the gendered barriers to internet access and use.
Feminist talk[COLUMN] How women in the Global South are RECLAIMING SOCIAL MEDIA to promote body positivity
Image sources: Photograph(left) by Amanda Hirsch; Photograph(right) by Nicole Marie Edine. Licensed under CC Attribution
Feminist talk[COLUMN] How women in the Global South are RECLAIMING SOCIAL MEDIA to promote body positivity
Image sources: Photograph(left) by Amanda Hirsch; Photograph(right) by Nicole Marie Edine. Licensed under CC Attribution
Feminist talkFraming access and power at Stockholm Internet Forum 2017
Photo taken by author at SIF 2017
Hundreds of activists, advocates, journalists, researchers, donors, and just about everyone else converged into the second-largest archipelago in the Baltic Sea – the city of Stockholm – to discuss powe“r and access online. 10PM sun aside, this year’s Stockholm Internet Forum (#SIF17) for easy tracking of the event on Twitter) was stronger than ever before and saw its participants and panelists talk about some real hard and somewhat depressing questions.
Feminist talk[COLUMN] Access and Beyond: Navigating mobile costs in communication
Photograph by Omaranabulsi under CC BY-SA 3.0 license
Feminist talk
Association for Progressive Communications (APC) 2022
Unless otherwise stated, content on the APC website is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)