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Reflecting on the Global Gathering 2024: Advancing digital rights and security
Reflecting on the Global Gathering 2024: Advancing digital rights and security
Reflecting on the Global Gathering 2024: Advancing digital rights and security
Reflecting on the Global Gathering 2024: Advancing digital rights and security
Silencing beyond borders: The alarming rise of digital transnational repression in Southeast Asia
Silencing beyond borders: The alarming rise of digital transnational repression in Southeast Asia
Silencing beyond borders: The alarming rise of digital transnational repression in Southeast Asia
Silencing beyond borders: The alarming rise of digital transnational repression in Southeast Asia
Community networks newsletter: Building common agendas that foster community-centred connectivity initiatives
Community networks newsletter: Building common agendas that foster community-centred connectivity initiatives
Community networks newsletter: Building common agendas that foster community-centred connectivity initiatives
Community networks newsletter: Building common agendas that foster community-centred connectivity initiatives
Digital Rights in the Asia-Pacific 2024 Public Report: Welcome to a Movement
Digital Rights in the Asia-Pacific 2024 or DRAPAC24 aimed to foster resilience and solidarity within the digital rights community. This year’s event gathered over 287 changemakers from 150 organizations in Taipei, Taiwan for two days of conversations centered on three broad themes: regional solution-making, empowerment of young persons, and adoption of open technology.
The DRAPAC Assembly traces its roots to the Coconet camps organised in the Philippines and Indonesia, and it has now evolved into a space for collective solution-making and alliance-building within the broader Asia-Pacific community. Its inaugural edition held last May 2023 in Chiang Mai, Thailand gathered a wide range of stakeholders – from activists and technologists to artists and journalists – for five days of workshops, panels, art exhibits, film screenings, and networking sessions.
Building on the success and lessons from DRAPAC23, this year’s event featured a more focused but diverse mix of sessions. DRAPAC24 platformed new voices, highlighted novel and community-led approaches to addressing digital rights challenges, and provided spaces for engagement and collaboration. Through DRAPAC, Asia-Pacific civil society can come together to advance the digital rights movement and forge a unified response to shared challenges in the region.
External URL Read here the public report in full Areas of work Community Human rights Topics Access Capacity building Cultural and linguistic diversity Digital inclusion Digital society Environment and ICTs Feminist internet Free/libre and open source software (FLOSS) Freedom of expression Human rights and ICTs Internet rights Media and ICTs Security and privacy Strategic use of the internet Regions Asia Tags Members involved EngageMediaDigital Rights in the Asia-Pacific 2024 Public Report: Welcome to a Movement
Digital Rights in the Asia-Pacific 2024 or DRAPAC24 aimed to foster resilience and solidarity within the digital rights community. This year’s event gathered over 287 changemakers from 150 organizations in Taipei, Taiwan for two days of conversations centered on three broad themes: regional solution-making, empowerment of young persons, and adoption of open technology.
The DRAPAC Assembly traces its roots to the Coconet camps organised in the Philippines and Indonesia, and it has now evolved into a space for collective solution-making and alliance-building within the broader Asia-Pacific community. Its inaugural edition held last May 2023 in Chiang Mai, Thailand gathered a wide range of stakeholders – from activists and technologists to artists and journalists – for five days of workshops, panels, art exhibits, film screenings, and networking sessions.
Building on the success and lessons from DRAPAC23, this year’s event featured a more focused but diverse mix of sessions. DRAPAC24 platformed new voices, highlighted novel and community-led approaches to addressing digital rights challenges, and provided spaces for engagement and collaboration. Through DRAPAC, Asia-Pacific civil society can come together to advance the digital rights movement and forge a unified response to shared challenges in the region.
External URL Read here the public report in full Areas of work Community Human rights Topics Access Capacity building Cultural and linguistic diversity Digital inclusion Digital society Environment and ICTs Feminist internet Free/libre and open source software (FLOSS) Freedom of expression Human rights and ICTs Internet rights Media and ICTs Security and privacy Strategic use of the internet Regions Asia Tags Members involved EngageMediaDigital Rights in the Asia-Pacific 2024 Public Report: Welcome to a Movement
Digital Rights in the Asia-Pacific 2024 Public Report: Welcome to a Movement
Digital Rights in the Asia-Pacific 2024 Public Report: Welcome to a Movement
Digital Rights in the Asia-Pacific 2024 Public Report: Welcome to a Movement
From village roots to digital dreams: How women are transforming rural connectivity and driving community change
Technology is a feminist issue. Technology is an issue for all feminists.
From 2 to 5 December, APC will join the 15th AWID International Forum in Bangkok, Thailand, which is both a global community event and a space of radical personal transformation that brings together feminist, women’s rights, gender justice, LBTQI+ and allied movements, in all our diversity and humanity, to connect, heal and thrive.
The AWID International Forum has always been a place to frame critical feminist issues, and more than ever it is critical that this space nurtures accessible, intentional and hopeful conversations about the different aspects of tech and its embeddedness in every aspect of feminist organising and movement building.
APC's aim is to bring this framing into the AWID Forum in the hope of bridging the conversations about feminist movement building/organising and digital technologies/infrastructures, from a much needed feminist and decolonising perspective that challenges power and the status quo. We want all feminists at AWID and beyond to understand and not be intimidated by the language and power of tech, to feel agency and empowerment in their engagement with tech, and to see feminist tech as a key strategy in our movements for feminist liberatory presents and futures.
Many members and partners in the APC network will be actively participating in various sessions as organisers, speakers and moderators, as well as hosting specific activities during the Forum that will advance our movements' connections and our advocacy around a feminist internet.
The Feminist Tech Gardens
In recent years, feminist techies have witnessed the massive expansion of digital infrastructure perpetuating colonial exploitation of Black and Indigenous communities and resources, with women human rights defenders often at the frontlines of these impacts and struggles. New forms of technology like generative artificial intelligence (AI) are not only subsidised through underpaid labour by the Global Majority, but are exacerbating harms through gender-based violence.
Technology is implicitly and explicitly embedded in gender-based violence, racism, homophobia, war and genocide, state surveillance, reproductive rights and health, public and civic participation, climate justice, feminist scholarship, mainstream publishing, and memory work. If we want technology that is feminist by design, we need spaces to contain and ground our dreams, enabling playfulness, experimentation and deep human connection in fertile soil to nurture and grow technology that is liberatory.
The Feminist Tech Gardens are the result of the collaboration between three feminist organisations that think deeply and critically about decolonising the internet and building fair, just, equitable, safe and feminist digital infrastructures: APC, Numun Fund and Whose Knowledge? All participants at the AWID Forum are invited to hands-on, interactive activities to re-discover and re-design our relationship with technology.
The Feminist Tech Gardens are diverse yet deeply interconnected ecosystems, with their own mood, energy and landscapes. The feminist digital rights conceptual umbrella for these spaces are the Feminist Principles of the Internet (FPI), a series of statements that offer a gender and sexual rights lens on critical internet-related rights.
Within the gardens, participants will find resources to cultivate and reclaim the digital and technological space of innovation with solidarity, hope and resistance. The gardens are interactive and nurturing spaces and at the same time they are deeply political. They are rooted in Global Majority practices and the perfect places for feminist cross-pollination, offering a reservoir of plurality of knowledge in connection with our territories, communal lands and ways of being and dreaming in life.
What are we growing in the gardens? See the plans for the gardens here: https://gardens.feminist.techCheck out some of the activities and sessions by APC, members and partners:
- Revisiting transnational feminist solidarity and movement building in light of experiences of technology-facilitated gender-based violence (TFGBV) in war and conflict zones
Monday 2 December | 11:45 to13:30 local time. Organised by APC
A panel discussion exploring of digital violence in war, conflict, and genocide. Focusing on regions like Palestine, Sudan, Lebanon, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, we will how online spaces normalize hate speech against communities labeled as "terrorists". Researchers, advocates, and activists will discuss how digital violence intersects with political and social struggles in the global South. Participants are invited to challenge dominant narratives, centering voices from conflict zones to shape a feminist understanding of digital violence rooted in lived experiences.
- Data sets and AI
Monday 2 December | 11:45-13:30 local time. Organised by Point of View
Join Point of View to take a step back to imagine a feminist world through artistic expression that transcends linguistic boundaries! Together, we will create a tapestry of “data” points that counter and build a new perspective of AI in the context of bodies, spirits and autonomy. This workshop is for anyone interested in understanding and reimagining one of the foundational blocks of AI systems: data from an artistic perspective.
- Platform Accountability Lab
Monday 2 to Wednesday 4 December | 11:00 to 20:30 local time. 5 December | 9:00 to 14:00 local time. Organised by Point of View and CREA
Join Point of View and CREA in rethinking how data misuse affects women and structurally excluded communities by signing up to be part of our upcoming campaign under the Arise Community. Together, we can make platforms more accountable, user-friendly and protective of everyone’s rights!
- Feminist Pub Quiz and Full Picture campaign launch
Tuesday 3 December | 18:00 to 21:00 local time. Organised by Our Voices Our Futures consortium (OVOF)
There will be a Feminist Pub Quiz and the launch of the Full Picture campaign about online mis- and disinformation. This will be a fun and fantastic opportunity to engage, network, and celebrate our shared commitment to feminist principles. Sign up for the @fullpicturenet launch. Participate in an exciting pub quiz where you can win #TheFullPicture merch and bragging rights. Scan the QR code to reserve your spot!
- Unlocking the future of feminist tech funding
Wednesday 4 December | 11:45 to 13:30 local time. Organised by Pollicy
This workshop equips grantmakers with insights into funding practices that transform, sustain, and strengthen digital rights and feminist tech communities. Focusing on feminist tech’s transformative impact in the global South, we’ll examine lessons from Feminist Civic Tech Funders like Numun Fund and leaders from feminist tech organisations. Pollicy will lead the conversation, sharing findings to reimagine Feminist Technology Philanthropies and #ShiftPower. The goal is to amplify feminist tech narratives, increase resources for data feminism, and advance feminist tech activism in the global South.
- Internet Shutdown game
Thursday 5 December | 10:45 to 12:30 local time. Organised by APC
APC developed the Shutdown Game to create an engaging and informative training activity that highlights the methods of internet shutdowns and ways to counteract them. Designed as a Creative Commons game for adaptation, this interactive session will offer a fun, hands-on approach to exploring the technical intricacies of various shutdown models. Using real-world scenarios and "circumvention" cards, players will learn about the technical mechanisms behind shutdowns and the strategies available to navigate them. Suitable for diverse audiences, the game raises awareness of tactics used to restrict internet access and builds understanding of internet infrastructure and circumvention tools.
- WHRD strategies challenging online violence
Thursday, 5 December | 10:45 to 12:30 local time. It will have Wordly interpretation and it is available virtually and in-person. Organised by Safety for Voices
A space for critical reflection and exchange of South-South experiences, which seeks to identify collective and community strategies to protect the voices of women defenders and nonbinary people in the digital environment, from a decolonial, integral and feminist protection approach, based on the recognition of the systematic violence we experience in the digital environment as an extension of patriarchal, racist and colonial violence.
- Take pictures at the #VisibleWikiWomxn photo booth
The photo booth is a practice and a feminist corner that Whose Knowledge? has brought to different convenings. This time, they are taking pictures and documenting fellow feminists, especially from the Global Majority worlds, at the AWID Forum, in order to create visual memories that will be brought to WikiCommons as part of the #VisibleWikiWomen campaign, while also centering feminist practices of consent and image-taking and sharing. Come say hi, hang out, take your photo, and talk more about feminist memory-making and visual memories at Plenary Foyer B at the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center.
Stay tuned for more updates! Follow #FeministTechGardens and #FeministTech in social media. Also, don't miss the Feminist Sound Bites we will be launching during the event!
Get in touch: gardens@feminist.tech
The AWID Forum downloadable and web-based app is available for download! It contains important information about the event, different ways to connect with participants and details on all the sessions. Visit this page to learn more.
Related partner Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID) Areas of work Feminist internet Human rights Topics Feminist internet Human rights and ICTs Internet rights Media and ICTs Strategic use of the internet Regions Global Tags Members involved PollicyFrom village roots to digital dreams: How women are transforming rural connectivity and driving community change
Technology is a feminist issue. Technology is an issue for all feminists.
From 2 to 5 December, APC will join the 15th AWID International Forum in Bangkok, Thailand, which is both a global community event and a space of radical personal transformation that brings together feminist, women’s rights, gender justice, LBTQI+ and allied movements, in all our diversity and humanity, to connect, heal and thrive.
The AWID International Forum has always been a place to frame critical feminist issues, and more than ever it is critical that this space nurtures accessible, intentional and hopeful conversations about the different aspects of tech and its embeddedness in every aspect of feminist organising and movement building.
APC's aim is to bring this framing into the AWID Forum in the hope of bridging the conversations about feminist movement building/organising and digital technologies/infrastructures, from a much needed feminist and decolonising perspective that challenges power and the status quo. We want all feminists at AWID and beyond to understand and not be intimidated by the language and power of tech, to feel agency and empowerment in their engagement with tech, and to see feminist tech as a key strategy in our movements for feminist liberatory presents and futures.
Many members and partners in the APC network will be actively participating in various sessions as organisers, speakers and moderators, as well as hosting specific activities during the Forum that will advance our movements' connections and our advocacy around a feminist internet.
The Feminist Tech Gardens
In recent years, feminist techies have witnessed the massive expansion of digital infrastructure perpetuating colonial exploitation of Black and Indigenous communities and resources, with women human rights defenders often at the frontlines of these impacts and struggles. New forms of technology like generative artificial intelligence (AI) are not only subsidised through underpaid labour by the Global Majority, but are exacerbating harms through gender-based violence.
Technology is implicitly and explicitly embedded in gender-based violence, racism, homophobia, war and genocide, state surveillance, reproductive rights and health, public and civic participation, climate justice, feminist scholarship, mainstream publishing, and memory work. If we want technology that is feminist by design, we need spaces to contain and ground our dreams, enabling playfulness, experimentation and deep human connection in fertile soil to nurture and grow technology that is liberatory.
The Feminist Tech Gardens are the result of the collaboration between three feminist organisations that think deeply and critically about decolonising the internet and building fair, just, equitable, safe and feminist digital infrastructures: APC, Numun Fund and Whose Knowledge? All participants at the AWID Forum are invited to hands-on, interactive activities to re-discover and re-design our relationship with technology.
The Feminist Tech Gardens are diverse yet deeply interconnected ecosystems, with their own mood, energy and landscapes. The feminist digital rights conceptual umbrella for these spaces are the Feminist Principles of the Internet (FPI), a series of statements that offer a gender and sexual rights lens on critical internet-related rights.
Within the gardens, participants will find resources to cultivate and reclaim the digital and technological space of innovation with solidarity, hope and resistance. The gardens are interactive and nurturing spaces and at the same time they are deeply political. They are rooted in Global Majority practices and the perfect places for feminist cross-pollination, offering a reservoir of plurality of knowledge in connection with our territories, communal lands and ways of being and dreaming in life.
What are we growing in the gardens? See the plans for the gardens here: https://gardens.feminist.techCheck out some of the activities and sessions by APC, members and partners:
- Revisiting transnational feminist solidarity and movement building in light of experiences of technology-facilitated gender-based violence (TFGBV) in war and conflict zones
Monday 2 December | 11:45 to13:30 local time. Organised by APC
A panel discussion exploring of digital violence in war, conflict, and genocide. Focusing on regions like Palestine, Sudan, Lebanon, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, we will how online spaces normalize hate speech against communities labeled as "terrorists". Researchers, advocates, and activists will discuss how digital violence intersects with political and social struggles in the global South. Participants are invited to challenge dominant narratives, centering voices from conflict zones to shape a feminist understanding of digital violence rooted in lived experiences.
- Data sets and AI
Monday 2 December | 11:45-13:30 local time. Organised by Point of View
Join Point of View to take a step back to imagine a feminist world through artistic expression that transcends linguistic boundaries! Together, we will create a tapestry of “data” points that counter and build a new perspective of AI in the context of bodies, spirits and autonomy. This workshop is for anyone interested in understanding and reimagining one of the foundational blocks of AI systems: data from an artistic perspective.
- Platform Accountability Lab
Monday 2 to Wednesday 4 December | 11:00 to 20:30 local time. 5 December | 9:00 to 14:00 local time. Organised by Point of View and CREA
Join Point of View and CREA in rethinking how data misuse affects women and structurally excluded communities by signing up to be part of our upcoming campaign under the Arise Community. Together, we can make platforms more accountable, user-friendly and protective of everyone’s rights!
- Feminist Pub Quiz and Full Picture campaign launch
Tuesday 3 December | 18:00 to 21:00 local time. Organised by Our Voices Our Futures consortium (OVOF)
There will be a Feminist Pub Quiz and the launch of the Full Picture campaign about online mis- and disinformation. This will be a fun and fantastic opportunity to engage, network, and celebrate our shared commitment to feminist principles. Sign up for the @fullpicturenet launch. Participate in an exciting pub quiz where you can win #TheFullPicture merch and bragging rights. Scan the QR code to reserve your spot!
- Unlocking the future of feminist tech funding
Wednesday 4 December | 11:45 to 13:30 local time. Organised by Pollicy
This workshop equips grantmakers with insights into funding practices that transform, sustain, and strengthen digital rights and feminist tech communities. Focusing on feminist tech’s transformative impact in the global South, we’ll examine lessons from Feminist Civic Tech Funders like Numun Fund and leaders from feminist tech organisations. Pollicy will lead the conversation, sharing findings to reimagine Feminist Technology Philanthropies and #ShiftPower. The goal is to amplify feminist tech narratives, increase resources for data feminism, and advance feminist tech activism in the global South.
- Internet Shutdown game
Thursday 5 December | 10:45 to 12:30 local time. Organised by APC
APC developed the Shutdown Game to create an engaging and informative training activity that highlights the methods of internet shutdowns and ways to counteract them. Designed as a Creative Commons game for adaptation, this interactive session will offer a fun, hands-on approach to exploring the technical intricacies of various shutdown models. Using real-world scenarios and "circumvention" cards, players will learn about the technical mechanisms behind shutdowns and the strategies available to navigate them. Suitable for diverse audiences, the game raises awareness of tactics used to restrict internet access and builds understanding of internet infrastructure and circumvention tools.
- WHRD strategies challenging online violence
Thursday, 5 December | 10:45 to 12:30 local time. It will have Wordly interpretation and it is available virtually and in-person. Organised by Safety for Voices
A space for critical reflection and exchange of South-South experiences, which seeks to identify collective and community strategies to protect the voices of women defenders and nonbinary people in the digital environment, from a decolonial, integral and feminist protection approach, based on the recognition of the systematic violence we experience in the digital environment as an extension of patriarchal, racist and colonial violence.
- Take pictures at the #VisibleWikiWomxn photo booth
The photo booth is a practice and a feminist corner that Whose Knowledge? has brought to different convenings. This time, they are taking pictures and documenting fellow feminists, especially from the Global Majority worlds, at the AWID Forum, in order to create visual memories that will be brought to WikiCommons as part of the #VisibleWikiWomen campaign, while also centering feminist practices of consent and image-taking and sharing. Come say hi, hang out, take your photo, and talk more about feminist memory-making and visual memories at Plenary Foyer B at the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center.
Stay tuned for more updates! Follow #FeministTechGardens and #FeministTech in social media. Also, don't miss the Feminist Sound Bites we will be launching during the event!
Get in touch: gardens@feminist.tech
The AWID Forum downloadable and web-based app is available for download! It contains important information about the event, different ways to connect with participants and details on all the sessions. Visit this page to learn more.
Related partner Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID) Areas of work Feminist internet Human rights Topics Feminist internet Human rights and ICTs Internet rights Media and ICTs Strategic use of the internet Regions Global Tags Members involved PollicyAsociación para el Progreso de las Comunicaciones (APC) 2022
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