This article highlights the need for increased action to address imbalances between women’s and men’s access to and participation in the Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) development. It analyses various aspects that contribute to such imbalance, including cultural (e.g. chauvinistic and/or gender-biased languages in discussions on mailing lists or in documentations), economic (e.g. unequal salary levels for women and men), political (e.g. male-dominated advocacy environment) and technical (e.g. unbalanced students gender in technical tutorials) ones. But on the other hand, it also emphasises the powerful potential of FLOSS as a vehicle for advancing gender equality in software expertise. In the end, this article points out that while...
ABSTRACT This article examines the gender inequalities in computing, with a particular emphasis on t...
The paper reviews literature that claims that for the first two decades of its existence, the comput...
The main question that this article attempts to answer is: Why women do not develope software? The a...
In this article, I discuss the potential of Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) for empowering w...
Part 1: Full PapersInternational audienceWomen are underrepresented in the IT sector. But the situat...
This article adopts a feminist perspective to examine masculine work culture in the development of f...
This article adopts a feminist perspective to examine masculine work culture in the development of f...
This article presents the results of a research study about the experiences of women in Open Source ...
Free and open source software is no longer limited to traditional software developers creating produ...
Open source research often portrays the community as a heterogeneous world involving diverse contrib...
This study examines female software developers as knowledge laborers with a special emphasis on free...
This article presents the results of a research study about the experiences of women in Open Source ...
The Open Source Software (OSS) Innovation process is no more a foreign face in the software developm...
Part 3: FLOSS AdoptionInternational audienceThis paper focuses on the inclusion initiatives of Open ...
Women are severely marginalized in software development, especially in open source. In this article ...
ABSTRACT This article examines the gender inequalities in computing, with a particular emphasis on t...
The paper reviews literature that claims that for the first two decades of its existence, the comput...
The main question that this article attempts to answer is: Why women do not develope software? The a...
In this article, I discuss the potential of Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) for empowering w...
Part 1: Full PapersInternational audienceWomen are underrepresented in the IT sector. But the situat...
This article adopts a feminist perspective to examine masculine work culture in the development of f...
This article adopts a feminist perspective to examine masculine work culture in the development of f...
This article presents the results of a research study about the experiences of women in Open Source ...
Free and open source software is no longer limited to traditional software developers creating produ...
Open source research often portrays the community as a heterogeneous world involving diverse contrib...
This study examines female software developers as knowledge laborers with a special emphasis on free...
This article presents the results of a research study about the experiences of women in Open Source ...
The Open Source Software (OSS) Innovation process is no more a foreign face in the software developm...
Part 3: FLOSS AdoptionInternational audienceThis paper focuses on the inclusion initiatives of Open ...
Women are severely marginalized in software development, especially in open source. In this article ...
ABSTRACT This article examines the gender inequalities in computing, with a particular emphasis on t...
The paper reviews literature that claims that for the first two decades of its existence, the comput...
The main question that this article attempts to answer is: Why women do not develope software? The a...