Technological practitioners and observers often depict hacking cultures as fast-evolving spaces for social, political, technological and cultural innovation. While interest in hackerspaces is growing in terms of technological innovation, limited attention has been paid to building inclusive collective real-world spaces for hacking. This dissertation addresses this lacuna in two ways: First, this study looks into the forms of inclusion and exclusion found in traditional hacking spaces, exploring in detail the invisible boundaries formed in and around such spaces. Second, this study foregrounds feminist hacker practices and the alternatives they offer to such limited traditional hacking spaces. It argues that traditional hackerspaces, while e...
Hacker and maker spaces (HMSs) are open-access workshops devoted to creative and technical work. The...
This essay argues that hacking binaries as well as hacking hybrids – theoretically, methodologically...
This paper explores which rules, norms, and values are relevant to contemporary practices of hacking...
Hackerspaces are physical community spaces where technology enthusiasts meet. Despite the term 'hack...
Hacking, as a mode of technical and cultural production, is commonly celebrated for its extraordinar...
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indiana University, Informatics and Computing, 2016Recent scholarship in Human-Comp...
In the early years of the 21st century, as free software communities matured, they began to recogniz...
This paper interrogates the use of digital spaces to promote gendered agency in social action. Speci...
With the proliferation of the computer over the past few decades, hacktivism—a form of activism thro...
This transdisciplinary thesis exhibits the potentials found in the intersection between (1) feminism...
In this dissertation I examine the alterglobalization of computer expertise with a focus on the crea...
This transdisciplinary thesis exhibits the potentials found in the intersection between (1) feminism...
Although there is a deep history of feminist engagement with technology, the FemTechNet initiative (...
This project is a radically multidisciplinary examination of how gender intervenes in programming cu...
The Hacktory, a technology education and creative space in Philadelphia, has developed an interactiv...
Hacker and maker spaces (HMSs) are open-access workshops devoted to creative and technical work. The...
This essay argues that hacking binaries as well as hacking hybrids – theoretically, methodologically...
This paper explores which rules, norms, and values are relevant to contemporary practices of hacking...
Hackerspaces are physical community spaces where technology enthusiasts meet. Despite the term 'hack...
Hacking, as a mode of technical and cultural production, is commonly celebrated for its extraordinar...
Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indiana University, Informatics and Computing, 2016Recent scholarship in Human-Comp...
In the early years of the 21st century, as free software communities matured, they began to recogniz...
This paper interrogates the use of digital spaces to promote gendered agency in social action. Speci...
With the proliferation of the computer over the past few decades, hacktivism—a form of activism thro...
This transdisciplinary thesis exhibits the potentials found in the intersection between (1) feminism...
In this dissertation I examine the alterglobalization of computer expertise with a focus on the crea...
This transdisciplinary thesis exhibits the potentials found in the intersection between (1) feminism...
Although there is a deep history of feminist engagement with technology, the FemTechNet initiative (...
This project is a radically multidisciplinary examination of how gender intervenes in programming cu...
The Hacktory, a technology education and creative space in Philadelphia, has developed an interactiv...
Hacker and maker spaces (HMSs) are open-access workshops devoted to creative and technical work. The...
This essay argues that hacking binaries as well as hacking hybrids – theoretically, methodologically...
This paper explores which rules, norms, and values are relevant to contemporary practices of hacking...