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Information, Communication & Society

Volume 10, Issue 3, 2007

Special Issue: Gender and ICT

CARTOGRAPHY OF GENDER EQUALITY PROJECTS IN ICT: Liberal equality from the perspective of situated equality

CARTOGRAPHY OF GENDER EQUALITY PROJECTS IN ICT: Liberal equality from the perspective of situated equality

DOI:
10.1080/13691180701410067
Marja Vehviläinena & Kristiina Brunilab

pages 384-403

Available online: 21 Jun 2007

Abstract

This paper examines gender equality activities in the context of information and communication technology (ICT), traces the social and cultural relations that intertwine with them and discusses the understandings of gender, equality and ICT maintained in them. The aim of the paper is to analyse how liberal equal treatment actions prevail in ICT, although it is well known that liberal politics alone do not succeed in promoting gender equality, and not even in fulfilling its own goal of raising the proportions of women in technology. The study is based on oral history interviews with 30 women who have committed important parts of their lives to gender equality activities through several decades, as well as follow-up studies of women's ICT groups that aimed to promote equality in ICT expertise, both of these studies being conducted in Finland. The interviewed gender equality workers are competent promoters of gender and equality. However, they need to negotiate their aims, for example, in order to get funding, within national and transnational institutional practices, with actors who have little knowledge regarding the social construction of gender, equality or ICT. The managerial terms ‘efficiency’ and ‘good practice’ then take over the understandings of the gender equality activities in ICT, mainly organized as projects, and further emphasize the measurable goals often linked to liberal gender equality actions. These terms have material consequences and while gender equality projects continue to provide possibilities for unexpected changes, they are locked within liberal politics.

Keywords

 

Details

  • Available online: 21 Jun 2007

Author affiliations

  • a Department of Women's Studies, University of Tampere, 33014, Finland E-mail:
  • b Department of Education, University of Helsinki, c/o Teollisuuskatu 23, 00014, Finland E-mail:

Author biographies

Marja Vehviläinen works as an associate professor in Women's Studies at the University of Tampere, Finland. She has researched gender and ICT in the context of working life and information society as well as technology development and nationalism.

Kristiina Brunila M.Ed. is preparing her doctoral thesis at the University of Helsinki, Finland. Her research concerns equality and equality work, the technology field included, in Finland from 1970s to the beginning of the twenty-first century.

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