We invite you to reflect on our 2024 journey, and the ways we embody being an organization with a collective heart in increasingly fraught times. The post 2024: A journey anchored in hope at Whose Knowledge? appeared first on Whose Knowledge?.| Whose Knowledge?
Technology is a feminist issue and an issue for all feminists. It is implicitly and explicitly embedded in gender-based violence, state surveillance, war and genocide, and many more issues affecting womxn, LGBTQIAP+ persons, and communities The post Blossoming gardens of feminist tech at AWID appeared first on Whose Knowledge?.| Whose Knowledge?
Our podcast Whose Voices? brings together conversations with incredible activists and change-makers to re-imagine and re-design the internet together. This year’s season is focused on decolonizing structured data, diving deeper into these systems. The post Decolonizing structured data: a new season of Whose Voices? appeared first on Whose Knowledge?.| Whose Knowledge?
The #VisibleWikiWomen campaign is an embodiment of our aspirations to organize in collaboration and in solidarity with our feminist partners, movements and friends looks like; from gathering African feminists at our first photobooth in Lusaka, in 2022, to speaking up in solidarity with African feminists and queer activists who were arrested in Zambia last year. Partnering with the incredible people at the Forum for the Empowerment of Women (FEW) to document Soweto Pride last September, was a ...| Whose Knowledge?
We write this in solidarity with the people of Palestine and beyond at this moment in time. But it is also an offering in full transparency, of our reflections to try and express ongoing solidarity in practice.| Whose Knowledge?
This year felt like watering the flowers that bloomed and tending to the knowledge and digital justice ecosystem that Whose Knowledge? is both a part of and helps build, grow, and strengthen. When talking ‘roadmaps’ and strategic planning, we came up with a different framing: rivermaps. What if we understood our work through the motion and stillness of water?| Whose Knowledge?
As we prepare to convene in Singapore, we invite you to browse through the sessions and interventions we’re co-holding and joining at Wikimania 2023.| Whose Knowledge?
Whose Knowledge? Knowledge Justice Research Lead Maari Maitreyi explores how hegemonic communities’ views, agenda, categories of classification and decisions can be embedded in Wikidata and established as truth.| Whose Knowledge?
Our Decolonizing Wikipedia Coordinator Mariana Fossatti reflects on the RightsCon Summit 2023, which she joined as a speaker and facilitator.| Whose Knowledge?
Reflections and provocations about DRAPAC23 from Claudia Pozo, Whose Knowledge? Language Justice coordinator.| Whose Knowledge?