Our resource list about caste, tech and resistance is a collection of different ways caste-oppressed people navigate the Internet, and resist discrimination on, and offline.
This podcast series was borne from the feminist fires lit in Lusaka and deepens these conversations in a fun, informal and engaging way. Use our e-zine as an audio and text guide through the DTI-EA podcast season.
Within our own team, we had to strengthen our feminist practices of care to cope with the pandemic’s effects on ourselves, our families and communities. This pattern aims to help you adapt these practices to your own context.
In August 2023, we invited over 30 participants for conversations on decolonizing the Internet’s structured data, ahead of Wikimania 2023 in Singapore. This report is a snapshot of the provocations, reflections, and happy speculations that emerged from our collective thinking about structured data.
The internet we know is not even close to being as multilingual and multimodal as we are in physical, embodied, life. To be multilingual is to honor and affirm the full richness and textures of our many selves and our different worlds better. But what would a truly multilingual and multimodal internet look, feel, and sound like?
In September 2022, the African Women's Development and Communication Network (FEMNET) and Whose Knowledge?, convened nearly 40 feminists working in tech from across the East-African region in Lusaka, Zambia, to hold conversations and reflections on decolonizing the internet. In this report we share experiences and collective strategies from this gathering.