Women represent less than 20% of tech leadership positions worldwide. In the EU, the average of women graduating in STEM is 11% and numbers are dropping. As professionals, women leave the tech industry twice as much as men.
WHY?
Because we socialize them to. Because the work environment is still massively hostile. Because they lack mentorship and role models.
And yet, the future is in code. 80% of the jobs in the next decade will require technological skills. And because technology will shape the future. With the rise of AI and robots, what will happen if we let women out of it?
So let's check which initiatives exist to shift the balance in tech!
80. Feminist Principles of the Internet
An Evolving Document
Developed at the
Gender, Sexuality, and Internet Meeting
organized by the
Association for Progressive Communications
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0
In April 2014, the Association for Progressive Communications, APC,
organized a Global Meeting on Gender, Sexuality, and the Internet in
Malaysia, with 50 participants from six continents comprising gender &
women’s rights activists, LGBTQI (lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans* and
intersex) movements, internet and technology rights organizations,
and human rights advocates. The goal of the meeting was to bridge
the gap between feminist movements and internet rights movements
and look at intersections and strategic opportunities to work together
as allies and partners.
The Global Meeting used a collaborative process to ask the question:
“As feminists, what kind of internet do we want
and what will it take for us to achieve it?”
Participants discussed and debated intersections of gender, sexuality,
and the internet – not only as a tool – but as a new public space and, in
thinking through these issues, developed a set of 15 feminist principles
of the internet. These are designed to be an evolving document that
informs our work on gender and technology, as well as influences our
policy-making discussions when it comes to internet governance.
We invite you to join the discussion and debate on our evolving set of
principles by getting in touch on http://erotics.apc.org
91. ● Divert the conversation and revisit privately
● Appeal to participant values
● Share why it matters to you
● Ask the speaker to see from another view
Ways bystanders take action
Point it out
This material is adapted from the Ada Initiative and may be used in accordance with the Ada Initiative's license. In the event of conflict between the re:Work terms and the Ada Initiative's license, the Ada Initiative's license will apply.
Change your company culture
130. Pia Mancini: an example of a woman
changing the world through technology
131.
132. We need to learn from the Middle East…
• Where 30-70% of the
enrollees in computer
science programs were
women.
• And 35% of tech
entrepreneurs are women,
a surprising statistic,
considering the global
norm of 10%.