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Published byDarrius Schwartz Modified over 9 years ago
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Impact of ICTs on women's participation in public and political life Association for Progressive Communications Women’s Rights Programme, January 2013
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Who we are / what we do International network of organisations using ICTs for social justice – 43 members around the world Womens rights programme & ICT policy programme Women’s rights programme – violence against women, sexual rights, evaluation
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What is the issue Information and Communication Technologies ICTs are not gender neutral – produced, used and distributed in a context of unequal power relations For marginalised groups with access, ICTs present possibilities to construct, deconstruct and reconfigure both their own identities and the structures – whether government, media or social – within which they live ICTs also enable new forms of discrimination, violence and exclusion
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What are our entry points? Women and marginalised communities are a key interest group in how the internet is governed, yet are are largely absent from spaces where decisions are made When we access the internet it is with all of our civil and political rights intact Norms and values offline are reflected online including – in discrimination and exclusion and in responses
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Shifts and nuances Internet governance Anonymity Privacy and consent New actors Defining harm No recognition for extended notions / extended definitions of ‘personhood’ Interaction as workers, content producers, ‘ordinary’ users
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Opening new possibilities Public participation – Tahrir bodyguards, rape of black lesbians in SA Organising – Meem Subversion – Pink Chaadi, Uprising of Women in Arab World Expanding citizenship Performing identity, negotiating restrictions
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Closing down spaces Shut downs – DRC October 2012 Censorship, regulation and pornography Misogyny and hate speech Rape videos, privacy and consent WHRDs – Egypt, Uganda Defining harm, mobilising anxiety Double standards of prosecution
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Who are the actors Individual users - norms and values (Technical community; Opus Dei -.fam) Private sector - no transparency on regulations & enforcement - tracking technologies & privacy control - privatisation of access State - protection vs rights framework
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Recommendations Extending definitions of personhood Expanded debate on ‘right to forget’ Engaging private sector Engage in internet governance eg IGF Indicators for CEDAW report cards Post-2015 development agenda WSIS +10
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