The gender politics of ICT /
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Corporate Authors: | , |
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Other Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Conference Proceeding |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Queensway, Enfield, Middlesex :
Middlesex University Press,
2005.
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.mupress.co.uk |
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Table of Contents:
- Invited papers. 1. Why are women still so few in IT?: understanding the persistent under-representation of women in the IT professions / Juliet Webster 2. Becoming and belonging: gendered processes in engineering / Wendy Faulkner 3. Bridging the boardoom 'divide': a personal view / Lesley Ottery 4. Intelligent ambience between heaven and hell: a salvation? / Cecile K.M. Crutzen. Gender politics. 5. An initial investigation of students' self-construction of pedagogical agents / Katherine R.B. Greysen 6. Some ideas on constitutive ethics for information and communication technologies / Frances Grundy 7. Gender mainstreaming in FP6: experiences from an IST project / Rosa Michaelson 8. Understandings of gender and competence in ICT / Johanna Sefyrin 9. Implementation of large scale software applications: possibilities for end-use participation / Linda Stepulevage and Miriam Mukasa 10. 'Social' robots and 'emotional' software agents: gendering processes and de-gendering strategies for 'technologies in the making' / Jutta Weber and Corinna Bath 11. New Europe, new attitudes?: some initial findings on women in computing in the CZech Republic / Eva Turner. Communications: exploiting technology. 12. A tool but not a medium: practical use of the Internet in the women's movement / Tanja Carstensen and Gabriele Winker 13. Blogging for life: the role of the cyberconduit in everyday narratives, cyberfeminism and global social change / Tess Pierce 14. 'I know that's not the topic we're on, but it is all linked isn't it?': gender and interaction in email list cooperation / Margit Pohl and Greg Michaelson 15. Internet research from a gender perspective: searching for differentiated use patterns / Gabriele Winker. Education: context and content. 16. Gender differentials in the adoption and use of information and communications technologies by lecturers in Nigerian universities / Rosemary O. Agbonlahor 17. Invitation to dialogue: feminist research meets computer science / Christina Björkman 18. Women's pleasure in computing / Hilde Corneliussen 19. Women's training revisited: developing new learning pathways for women IT technicians using a holistic approach / Debbie Ellen and Clem Herman 20. Learning in groups: gender impacts in e-learning / Sigrid Schmitz and Ruth MeC7mer. Employment. 21. 'You don't have to be male to work here, but it helps!': gender and the IT labour market / Alison Adam, and others 22. Networking and career advancement strategies for women: a study of the effects of networking and mentoring on ICT careers for women / Frances S. Grodzinsky and Andra Gumbus 23. The potential of adaptive collaborative work: a proposal for a new working style for Japanese women / Mayumi Hori and Masakazu Ohashi.