Multi-stakeholder inclusive ICT Policy Process urged to combat violence against women in cyberspace
With the goal to create awareness about information and communication technologies and violence against women in cyber space, and the implications of various government policies on women, a seminar titled “ICTs and Violence Against Women – Policy Implications” was jointly organized by Bytes for All (B4A) and the Pakistan Software Houses Association for IT & ITES (P@SHA) on 30 January 2010 in Lahore.
Mirando al 2009: avances en la tarea del PARM LAC
El trabajo del Programa de Apoyo a las Redes de Mujeres en América Latina y Caribe en 2009 logró avances que destacan contribuciones al campo de la capacitación en TIC, la evaluación de proyectos y la investigación social en el ciberespacio con perspectiva de género y feminista.
Take Back the Tech! grows louder through local campaigns in 2009
From 25 November to 10 December, the message came across loud and clear – whether it was via audiocast in Malaysia, chat relay in Brazil, protest march in Second Life, song-writing in Pakistan, calendars in Argentina, tweets in Mexico, posters in cybercafes in the Congo, or a mural on the streets of Soweto in South Africa. In over a dozen languages and through all platforms and medium both online and off, people took control of technology to end violence against women during the Take Back the Tech! campaign.
Dominican Republic guarantees women's equality in technology initiatives and policies across the country using APC GEM
The Dominican Republic is the first Latin American country to act on their commitments to involve women in the information society nationwide. This Caribbean island nation of ten million has promised to include a “gender perspective” in every information and communications technology initiative and policy developed by the government from now on. The tool the Dominicans have
chosen to design and evaluate all the public policies is the APC gender evaluation methodology (GEM).
Take Back the Tech! video in South Africa
Women’sNet, with partner, Artists Say No to Violence Against Women and Children, held an event in Soweto, Johannesburg. They used the occasion of International Human Rights Day, which marks the last day of the 16 Days of Activism to draw attention to the role that new media has to play both as a tool for abuse and as a tool for protest.
Pakistani activists tweet and sing against violence against women
Pakistani activists, led by Bytes for All and the Pakistan Software Houses Association for IT and ITES (P@SHA), are taking over the internet cloud and radio airwaves during the 16 days of activism to end violence against women (VAW) in the Pakistan Take Back the Tech! campaign.
Jehan Ara, P@SHA president, is leading “tweeples” in constant tweeting and blogging until violence against women is better addressed in her country.
Take Back the Tech! mural in Soweto
Women’sNet has just completed painting a mural in Soweto, Chris Hani Bargwanath Hospital wall. The aim of this activity is to launch a global campaign, Take Back the Tech The campaign which calls on all ICT users – especially women and girls – to take control of technology and strategically use any ICT platform at hand (mobile phones, instant messengers, blogs, websites, digital cameras, email, podcasts and more) for activism against gender-based violence.
Take Back the Tech! 16 Days of Activism against Violence against Women
Intercambio Tecnológico Feminista en Buenos Aires
Del 16 al 18 de noviembre se realiza el taller de Intercambio Tecnológico Feminista con la participación de 35 representantes de grupos de mujeres del noreste y sur del país, más 8 instructoras a cargo de los módulos de capacitación. Este intercambio tecnológico intensivo abarca cuatro áreas de comunicación utilizando las tecnologías de la información y la comunicación: audio, imagen y video, arte gráfico digital y trabajo en redes sociales por internet. La actividad se desarrolla en las dependencias de la Librería de Mujeres, en Buenos Aires.
Taller de GEM con funcionarias y funcionarios del Area Mujer de países mesoamericanos y del Caribe
Treinta y cinco participantes de seis paises latinoamericanos asisten al taller de GEM, metodología de evaluación con perspectiva de género de proyectos TIC, que se realiza en Santo Domingo, del 2 al 4 de noviembre. En su mayoría, representan a las oficinas de la Mujer de sus países, tanto a nivel nacional como provincial.
Women over 35: Too old for technology?
In rural Latin America, women are fed up of hearing that they are “too old” to use computers. “ The lives of many women in Latin America have changed significantly in the past few decades. Rural women in their thirties have at least primary school education and know their rights thanks in many cases to community radio,” says APC’s Dafne Sabanes Plou. “They are ready for a place in today’s networked world.”
Consulta Nacional ODM3 en Buenos Aires
El 17 y 18 de septiembre se realizó la Consulta Nacional del Proyecto ODM3 “Fortalecimiento de las mujeres para el uso estratégico de las tecnologías de la información y la comunicación para trabajar contra la violencia hacia las mujeres y las niñas” . Participaron 40 representantes de organizaciones y grupos de mujeres de todo el país, además de académicas y funcionarias del Area de la Mujer. La reunión se realizó en la Librería de Mujeres, en Buenos Aires.
Comienzan las actividades del proyecto ODM3 en América Latina
Cuatro países latinoamericanos, Argentina, Brasil, Colombia y México, darán cabida al desarrollo del Proyecto Objetivos de Desarrollo del Milenio 3: Invirtiendo en Igualdad, a cargo del Programa de Apoyo a las Redes de Mujeres de APC (PARM de APC). Las actividades a desarrollarse durante los dos años de duración del proyecto incluyen consultas nacionales, talleres de capacitación técnica, incidencia en políticas públicas y apoyo a pequeños proyectos a cargo de organizaciones y grupos de mujeres.
The strategic use of technology for social change: APC WNSP and the women's movement
When the Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID) screened some of the Feminist Tech Exchange (FTX) digital stories in the AWID Forum plenaries in November 2008, APC Women’s Networking Support Programme (WNSP) manager Chat Garcia Ramilo remembers how thrilled the WNSP team felt. “And I remember how nervous and excited the FTX participants were too, as their personal story was about to be shown before 2,000-plus women.” The plenary was packed, and the second the narration of the digital story started there was a complete hush.
ICTs and women's equality: APC and the gender evaluation methodology (GEM)
GEM is an evaluation methodology that integrates a gender analysis into evaluations of initiatives that use ICTs for social change. It is an evaluation tool for determining whether ICTs are really improving or worsening women’s lives and gender relations, as well as for promoting positive change at the individual, institutional, community and broader social levels.
GEM has been developed from the ground up, and has involved the collaboration of hundreds of community-based organisations and individuals since its first design in 2002. The network that has developed includes people who developed GEM, who train in how to use GEM, who are adapting GEM to increase its applicability to rural ICT4D projects, telecentres, software localisation and ICT policy advocacy, and who are now offering GEM evaluations on a consultancy basis.
Members of the network share how GEM has changed their understanding of gender and the way they work with ICT. Read more
Feminist Tech Exchange (FTX): Uniting feminist techies and the women’s movement
Ekaete Judith Umoh, director of the Family-Centred Initiative for Challenged Persons, is a polio survivor turned advocate for other women with disabilities. She was one of 100 women’s activists trained at the first Feminist Tech Exchange in Cape Town, South Africa late in 2008.
Making the link between technology, violence against women and MDG3
Mobiles equipped with cameras are being used to peep up girl’s skirts as they climb on board buses. The same “emergency alert” button to send a distress signal from a cell phone is also connected to a global positioning system signal that allows women’s movements to be closely monitored by their spouses. Hundreds of Indian women denounce street sexual harassment in the Blank Noise Project Blogathon, many snapping shots of “Eve-teasing” aggressors.
Call for the immediate release of Shadi Sadr, Iranian human rights defender
The APC Women’s Networking Support Programme joins the Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID) in their call to action and grave concern regarding the violent arrest of Shadi Sadr on the morning of Friday July 17th 2009.
AWID shares the following information and call to action:
Let's work together: marketing tools for women farmers Tanzania's mountains
The women belong to the group TIAME, a farming group in the village of Peko-Misegese, in Morogoro. “TIAME” is the local language for “lets us work together”. This group produces various crops including vegetables, beans, sunflower and round potatoes but accessibility to market information is a big problem.
Taller de GEM para telecentros en Bogota
Del 21 al 23 de julio se realizará en Bogotá, Colombia, un taller de GEM, Metodología de
evaluación de proyectos de tecnología de la información y la comunicación para el desarrollo, con perspectiva de género, con el fin de capacitar a facilitadores y facilitadoras de telecentros comunitarios. Estos facilitadores y facilitadoras, luego de la capacitación, pondrán en práctica la sensibilización de género en su tarea cotidiana y evaluarán la labor de sus telecentros
utilizando GEM.
El taller está organizado por COLNODO, la Universidad Autónoma de
Nigerian feminist blogger wins scholarship to BlogHer '09 conference
Toyin Ajao-Dawodu from Nigeria is so into women blogging she helps run a technology camp for girls in Nigeria coordinated by her organisation, Women’s Technology Empowerment Centre. Together with W.Tech’s Executive Director, Oreoluwa Somolu, she co-facilitated the workshop “Blogs can move the world” at last year’s Association for Women in Development’s Forum on Movement Building.
R U Ready 2 Talk? Keep your chats exactly that! New Campaign for South African girls
The “Keep your chats exactly that!” campaign aims to ensure that young people are empowered to use their cell phones and the Internet for positive self expression. The campaign was launched by Girls’Net, a daughter project of Women’sNet.
Keep your chats exactly that! New campaign raises awareness on ICT safety for girls
“Keep your chats exactly that!” is a youth campaign run by Girls’Net, a daughter project of Women’sNet, to raise awareness among young people about the safe use of mobile phones, chats, and other social networking tools.
Access to knowledge and gender - the latest edition from GenderIT
The latest edition of GenderIT looks at the question of access to knowledge focussing on Africa. Over the last century, copyright and patents legislation have penetrated into most countries. Strengthened by international trade agreements, and often pressure from the United States, this has had the impact of both shrinking the amount of knowledge that is freely available, and of legislating what is and is not ‘knowledge’. This has been happening at a time when it is becoming easier and cheaper to copy and transmit information.
Nuevas tecnologías para la difusión de campañas contra la violencia de género
“Los medios son suministradores de la cultura dominante patriarcal y en esa medida confirman y difunden modelos de comportamiento sexista” señaló Esther Cerro Alonso, integrante de la Federación de Mujeres Progresistas durante la sesión Violencia y comunicación, convocada por la Asociación para el Progreso de las Comunicaciones (APC), en el marco del XI Encuentro Feminista Latinoamericano y del Caribe.
Deadline Extended: Call for country partners - research on sexuality and the internet
The Association for Progressive Communications Women’s Networking Support Programme (APC WNSP) is excited to announce a call for country research partners on the issue of sexuality and the internet.
Extended Application Deadline: 29 March 2009
Notification of Acceptance: 6 April 2009
Convocatoria a Intercambio Tecnológico Feminista
Cuernavaca, México será la sede de un intercambio tecnológico entre feministas de América Latina y el Caribe, el encuentro tiene como precedente múltiples experiencias y proyectos de capacitación en feminismo y nuevas tecnologías desarrollados por organizaciones feministas. El objetivo de este taller es generar un espacio de reflexión, debate e intercambio de conocimientos tecnológicos en internet para el accionar político feminista.
Take Back the Tech! Take action - online and off - to end violence against women!
Whether its through community radio, posters, sms, emails, audiocasts or websites, creative and informed use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) helps get the word out on violence against women (VAW). We have to know about technology to best use it for our activism, we have to understand it to protect ourselves and others, and to keep shaping an internet for all.
“Conexión FTX”: un espacio para la práctica feminista de tecnología
En el marco del Foro de AWID está funcionando “Conexión FTX”, un espacio dedicado a la práctica de la tecnología de la información y la comunicación, que en muchas maneras recoge los aprendizajes obtenidos por las 100 participantes en el Encuentro de Intercambio Feminista de Tecnología (FTX, por sus siglas en inglés) que se realizó la semana pasada en Ciudad del Cabo. “Conexión FTX” funciona diariamente de 8 a 20 hs, del 14 al 17 de noviembre en el Centro de Convenciones de Ciudad del Cabo.
Más uso de tecnología por los derechos de las mujeres
El Encuentro para el Intercambio Feminista de Tecnología (FTX) finalizó el 12 de noviembre con un firme interés de las participantes por hacer un uso efectivo de la tecnología de la información y la comunicación (TIC) para avanzar por los derechos de las mujeres.