News: Gender & ICTs, Global
FTX – A new way to bring together feminist techies and the women’s movement
Background to EroTICs – a new research project on sexuality and the internet
The APC women’s programme looks at the current climate internationally regarding “harmful content” on the internet and explains the raison d’etre of their current exploration into the world of sexuality online.
Take Back the Tech: take action - online and off - to end violence against women
FTX Hub takes back the tech
Short-listed GenARDIS III candidates announced
The Gender, Agriculture and Rural Development in the Information Society (GenARDIS) Small Grants Fund is delighted to announce that twenty projects have been short-listed as possible GenARDIS grantees. The short-listed proposals come from sixteen countries in Africa and the Caribbean, ranging from the Dominican Republic and St. Vincent on over the Atlantic Ocean to rock-skip throughout western Africa in Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Nigeria, Cameroon and the Congo. Eastern Africa and Southern Africa also have their share of representation with projects from Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Read the entire announcement
Mental gym at the GEM exchange
GEM speaks to people, said Sarah Earl, an evaluation specialist attending a workshop to improve what’s been coined as the Gender Evaluation Methodology. More than an evaluation theory, GEM "is a development theory," commented Earl who, along with over 40 ICT practitioners from around the world, took part in a training exchange in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, at the end of July 2007. Read the full account on APC WNSP.
GLOBAL GEM WORKSHOP: ICT and development: The eyes we see the world through
APC POOL OF WRITERS: Two job announcements, one pool
Keeping track of what media's saying via African software
Another world is not possible without women
Gender and ICT Policy in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Re-thinking ICT development through Gender
From the Olympus to the internet, a new network of journalists with a gender perspective
CAMPAIGN: Take back the tech!
How many hours a day do you spend using some kind of ICT tool? Have you ever wondered how it connects with violence against women? Can things like mobile phones, webcams, blogs and videogames transform power relations between women and men? From 25 November to 10 December, APC Women’s Networking Support Programme (APC WNSP) invites you to take back the tech! For 16 days, this campaign engages you to think about how your use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) can work to eliminate, or perpetuate violence against women (VAW).
