Decolonizing the Internet East Africa
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.
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Decolonizing the Internet’s Structured Data – Summary Report
In October 2021, we invited over 40 participants from around the world for the conversation Decolonizing the Internet’s Structured Data.Together with amazing panelists and participants, we examined whose views, whose agenda, whose ontologies (categories of classification), and whose decisions build and sustain these classifications and systems. Read the report back from this gathering.
State of the Internet’s Languages Report
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?
Frequently Asked Questions #VisibleWikiWomen 2021 campaign
We have compiled questions brought up by #VisibleWikiWomen participants throughout the campaign in this new FAQ resource. It will help participants, partners, and allies, to have a better experience when bringing their images online. Take a look and find the answer to that doubt that has been bugging you! If you don't find what you are looking for, drop us a line with your question and we will incorporate it—this is a work in progress!
Whose Knowledge Prospectus 2021-2023
Read about Whose Knowledge? programs, initiatives and plans for the 2021 - 2023 period.
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Guide for Cultural and Memory Institutions to make women visible on Wikipedia
This guide has been created to support GLAM institutions to join and participate in #VisibleWikiWomen.
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Decolonizing the Internet’s Languages – Summary Report
What came out of Decolonizing the Internet's Languages 20219 gathering? Don't miss out this report full of insights and reflections from participants.
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The full series!
This resource brings together the previous four parts of "Our Stories Our Knowledges" that we have published over November 2018.
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Part 1: Decolonizing our stories and knowledges
A guide for supporting marginalized communities in sharing their knowledge online, and to encourage allies who wish to help with this work.
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Part 2: Transformative practices for building community knowledge
A set of practices and tools for creating, growing, and sharing marginalized community’s knowledge online.
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