In Recoding Gender, Janet Abbate explores the untold history of women in computer science and programming from the Second World War to the late twentieth century. Demonstrating how gender has shaped the culture of computing, she aims to offer a valuable historical perspective on today’s concerns over women’s underrepresentation in the field. Jennifer Miller recommends this book for both readers interested in an account of women’s participation and contributions in the field of computer science and to those seeking answers to the challenges in setting policy for the scientific and technical workforce
Contents The book contains an introduction and ten chapters. The first two chapters The gendering o...
Reviewed Works: Gender Equity: An Integrated Theory of Stability and Change by Janet Saltzman Chafet...
Youth work with girls has taken inspiration from feminist theory and the women’s movement, with comm...
Neurofeminism is the first interdisciplinary collection of essays to address how recent neuroscience...
Today, interest in women’s work in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) runs high, a na...
The best scholarship on gender is one that translates readily into advocacy, action, and interventio...
Based on analyses from twenty-one research teams in fourteen countries, this contribution explores w...
The book Unlocking the clubhouse: Women in computing written by Jane Margolis and Allan Fisher is a ...
Feminism, Gender, and Universities celebrates the way in which feminism has forever changed the terr...
Today at LSE, on Monday 25 January 2016, Anne-Marie Slaughter discusses her much-publicised new book...
Review of Gender Shrapnel in the Academic Workplace, by Ellen Mayock. Palgrave Macmillan, 2016
How might we tackle institutionalised gender inequalities? In What Works: Gender Equality by Design,...
Wade, Lisa (Editor) with Douglas Hartmann and Christopher Uggen (Series Editors). Assigned: Life wit...
About the book: Ghosts in the Machine examines the complex relationships between gender and informat...
Review of Appropriately Indian: Gender and Culture in a New Transnational Class by Smitha Radhakrish...
Contents The book contains an introduction and ten chapters. The first two chapters The gendering o...
Reviewed Works: Gender Equity: An Integrated Theory of Stability and Change by Janet Saltzman Chafet...
Youth work with girls has taken inspiration from feminist theory and the women’s movement, with comm...
Neurofeminism is the first interdisciplinary collection of essays to address how recent neuroscience...
Today, interest in women’s work in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) runs high, a na...
The best scholarship on gender is one that translates readily into advocacy, action, and interventio...
Based on analyses from twenty-one research teams in fourteen countries, this contribution explores w...
The book Unlocking the clubhouse: Women in computing written by Jane Margolis and Allan Fisher is a ...
Feminism, Gender, and Universities celebrates the way in which feminism has forever changed the terr...
Today at LSE, on Monday 25 January 2016, Anne-Marie Slaughter discusses her much-publicised new book...
Review of Gender Shrapnel in the Academic Workplace, by Ellen Mayock. Palgrave Macmillan, 2016
How might we tackle institutionalised gender inequalities? In What Works: Gender Equality by Design,...
Wade, Lisa (Editor) with Douglas Hartmann and Christopher Uggen (Series Editors). Assigned: Life wit...
About the book: Ghosts in the Machine examines the complex relationships between gender and informat...
Review of Appropriately Indian: Gender and Culture in a New Transnational Class by Smitha Radhakrish...
Contents The book contains an introduction and ten chapters. The first two chapters The gendering o...
Reviewed Works: Gender Equity: An Integrated Theory of Stability and Change by Janet Saltzman Chafet...
Youth work with girls has taken inspiration from feminist theory and the women’s movement, with comm...