Feminist reflections on internet policies

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Cyber law in Zambia: should it be repelled? Thoughts from a female human rights defender

Fri, 12/10/2021 - 14:09

This article provides insights into the recently passed Cyber Security and Cyber Crimes Act, 2021 in Zambia, from the perspective of Laura Miti, an award-winning human rights defender. Mitri alerts on how this act gives sweeping powers to the government to hush criticism of any kind and curtail freedom of expression and privacy.

What can digital surveillance teach us about online gender-based violence?

Mon, 11/01/2021 - 15:15

The article argues that digital surveillance is part of gendered and racist disciplinary structures, that manifest in specific forms of online gender-based violence experienced by black Muslim women influencers.

EROTICS Regional Survey learnings (2): understanding access and expression, and negotiating differences

Tue, 10/05/2021 - 15:57

Srinidhi Raghavan, coordinator of the EROTICS Regional Survey 2020, shares her learnings from cross-country feminist research on internet and sexuality through the lens of the Feminist Principles of the Internet.

EROTICS Regional Survey learnings (1): reflections on feminist internet research design

Tue, 10/05/2021 - 15:32

Srinidhi Raghavan, coordinator of the EROTICS Regional Survey 2020, shares her learnings from cross-country feminist research on internet and sexuality in South Asia. In this first part, the researcher reflects around identity, community agency and language.

Learning digital security as a “non-techie”

Thu, 09/30/2021 - 23:53

This article expresses personal experience of navigating the digital space and learning about digital security in a world filled with neurotypical upper caste people in authority.

A mine-ridden internet and six rules for understanding anti-rights narratives

Thu, 09/23/2021 - 15:00

Florencia Goldsman reviews the study "Engendering Hate: The contours of state-aligned gendered disinformation online", adding pieces to the puzzle of targeted digital violence that undermines women and LGBTIQ+ people online presences.

 

These are just some of the ways women and LGBTQ+ people make the internet healthier

Thu, 09/23/2021 - 14:17

What can be done to make the internet healthier? Some of the most compelling answers arise in the very communities that experience the worst online violence plaguing the internet.

Sexual assault and digital evidence in India (Part 2): Your right to privacy versus the right to complain

Thu, 09/16/2021 - 16:36

In the second and last part of this in-depth article, the author unpacks the persistence of rape myths in judicial reasoning, even veiled under the promises of neutrality and accuracy of digital evidence.

Sexual assault and digital evidence in India (Part 1): Is electronic data deciding whether a woman has been raped or not?

Fri, 09/10/2021 - 20:28

This insightful piece highlights how digital evidence is overwhelming the legal and judicial imagination by looking specifically at cases of rape trials in India.

Can social media platforms tackle online violence without structural change?

Tue, 08/17/2021 - 14:53

We welcome Facebook, Google, TikTok and Twitter commitments to tackle online abuse on their platforms, however without ensuring that the systems they create do not reproduce, and amplify existing inequalities. Built-in safety tools will only mitigate harms from the surface.

r/chickflixxx: feminist (de)construction of online porn

Fri, 08/06/2021 - 16:03

How does porn take shape based on the audience's perspective and the practice of sharing and commenting on available online content? This article, based on a digital ethnographic analysis of a Reddit community, explores what feminist porn means on the internet.

Transgender Act in India: A law that replicates existing challenges with digitisation?

Thu, 07/15/2021 - 22:14

In India, the digitisation drive of services interlinked with offline violence, marginalisation and stigma make it almost impossible for transgender persons to be considered as people who deserve equal rights. Through the provisions mentioned in the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act 2019, this article gives us a glimpse of human rights violations and denial of a life with dignity.

The identity predicament: a story about statelessness and the fight for denied rights

Thu, 07/15/2021 - 21:27

The system of integrated biometric database in Kenya, Huduma Namba, exposes multilayered challenges of statelessness, loss of basic human rights and availing government services. Through conversations with Mariam, a Nubian woman, we learn about the tedious and extremely long waiting period to obtain an ID card, without which people from ethnic minorities are not counted as citizens, and are pushed to the margins.

#MeToo India: The limits of analysis

Tue, 07/06/2021 - 16:17

In this paper, researcher Nayantara Ranganathan analyses tweets with the hashtag #metooindia, and examines the possibilities, limits and contradictions of studying a movement through a dataset of tweets centred around a phrase.

Platforms, Power, and Politics: Perspectives from Domestic and Care Work in India

Thu, 07/01/2021 - 22:53

CIS has been undertaking a two-year project studying the entry of digital platforms in the domestic and care work in India, supported by the Association for Progressive Communications as part of the Feminist Internet Research Network. Implemented through 2019-21, the objective of the project is to use a feminist lens to critique platform modalities and orient platformisation dynamics in radically different, worker-first ways. Ambika Tandon and Aayush Rathi led the research team at CIS. The Domestic Workers’ Rights Union is a partner in the implementation of the project, as co-researchers.

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Creating and Caring for Feminist Digital Archives in Africa

Wed, 06/23/2021 - 20:58

This article explores the labour and determination that goes into preserving African women’s history, reclaiming online spaces and, more importantly, ensuring that these stories remain accessible and continue to grow for the future generation to come.

Erotics regional survey 2020 Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka: A different contextual exploration on sexuality, rights and the internet

Thu, 06/10/2021 - 15:00

At different times over the past seven years, the Association of Progressive Communications Women’s Rights Programme (APC WRP) project EROTICS: Exploratory Research on Sexuality and the Internet has conducted surveys among its worldwide network of gender and sexuality activists, advocates, professionals and academics. APC launched the EROTICS network in 2009 to begin research in Brazil, India, Indonesia, Lebanon, South Africa and the United States.

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Queer lust and internet orgasms

Tue, 06/08/2021 - 22:05

In this piece, the author investigates how they witnessed alternative porn that in its core is feminist, queer and diverse on the internet

When our work doesn't fit metrics: for another way to count women on Wikipedia

Fri, 06/04/2021 - 20:59

The Wikipedia gender gap has been well documented for a decade. But are women in the Wikimedia movement in the same situation as a few years ago? What has changed and what still needs to be done?

Queer on the Internet: The Politics of Visibility

Thu, 05/27/2021 - 21:00

In this article, three queer-identifying internet users from Pakistan, talk about queer (in)visibility and the precarity of private online spaces for expression.

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