While technology has rapidly become more accessible to more people, its benefits are not always evenly shared. This paper searches for methods of identifying and defining gender inequality in architecture as it relates to digital technology and computation. The authors begin by documenting and then questioning existing metrics for measuring women’s participation in architecture, then look outside the field to STEM disciplines, educational research, and economic theory as means of framing this research agenda. By examining and critiquing current patterns of technological distribution and academic culture, the authors seek to foster greater equality in education, architecture, and, consequently, the built environment
Architecture is, at its most basic, about imagining desirable futures. Yet, despite growing awarenes...
Societies are sustainable if they consist of a mixture of users with various interests, needs, and a...
This thesis investigates the potential for a feminist practice in architecture. Its first part focu...
Cultural narratives of digital technology in architecture rely heavily upon stories of unique, almos...
In the 21st century, technologies like the Internet are commonly regarded as an empowering and uplif...
Conventions of authorship and attribution historically excluded or erased women’s contributions to t...
The implication that the social construct of our private lives [stereotyped gender roles associated ...
Architecture is characterised by a lack of women in the profession and a significant drop–out after ...
Many influential architects—many of them female—have been able to change how the world sees architec...
Historically, the work of white Western male architects has dominated architectural history educatio...
The issue of gender inequality in architecture has been part of the profession’s discourse for many ...
This is a call for the development of a more robust theoretical position about the gender implicatio...
Built space inevitably structures social relationships by creating interior and exterior spaces, cat...
The issue of gender inequality in architecture has been part of the profession’s discourse for many ...
Taking as its starting point the increasing importance of the role of digital curators within instit...
Architecture is, at its most basic, about imagining desirable futures. Yet, despite growing awarenes...
Societies are sustainable if they consist of a mixture of users with various interests, needs, and a...
This thesis investigates the potential for a feminist practice in architecture. Its first part focu...
Cultural narratives of digital technology in architecture rely heavily upon stories of unique, almos...
In the 21st century, technologies like the Internet are commonly regarded as an empowering and uplif...
Conventions of authorship and attribution historically excluded or erased women’s contributions to t...
The implication that the social construct of our private lives [stereotyped gender roles associated ...
Architecture is characterised by a lack of women in the profession and a significant drop–out after ...
Many influential architects—many of them female—have been able to change how the world sees architec...
Historically, the work of white Western male architects has dominated architectural history educatio...
The issue of gender inequality in architecture has been part of the profession’s discourse for many ...
This is a call for the development of a more robust theoretical position about the gender implicatio...
Built space inevitably structures social relationships by creating interior and exterior spaces, cat...
The issue of gender inequality in architecture has been part of the profession’s discourse for many ...
Taking as its starting point the increasing importance of the role of digital curators within instit...
Architecture is, at its most basic, about imagining desirable futures. Yet, despite growing awarenes...
Societies are sustainable if they consist of a mixture of users with various interests, needs, and a...
This thesis investigates the potential for a feminist practice in architecture. Its first part focu...