Gender and Technology at Work: From Workplace Studies to Social Justice in Design

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Gender and Technology at Work: From Workplace Studies to Social Justice in Design
Abstract
This book brings together the vast research literature about gender and technology to help designers understand what a gender perspective and a focus on intersectionality can contribute to designing information technology systems and artifacts, and to assist organizations as they work to develop work cultures that are supportive of women and marginalized genders and people. Drawing on empirical and analytical studies of women's work and technology in many parts of the world, the book addresses how to make invisible aspects of work visible; how to recognize women's skills without falling into the trap of gender stereotyping; how to engage in improving working conditions; and how to defend care of life situations and needs against a managerial logic. It addresses challenges for design, including many overlooked and undervalued aspects, such as the complexities involved in human–machine interactions, as well as the need to create safe spaces for research subjects. --Publisher's description
Place
Cambridge
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Date
2024
# of Pages
xv, 388 pages
Language
English
ISBN
978-1-00-924371-1
Short Title
Gender and Technology at Work
Accessed
2/20/24, 6:49 PM
Notes

Contents: Introduction. Part I. Gender and Technology – A Research Trajectory: 1. Gender and technology – a historical perspective; 2. The ethical-political perspective; 3. Pathways to a gendered and intersectional perspective. Part II. Gender and Technology at the Workplace: 4. Women and machines in the factory; 5. Office automation and the redesign of work; 6. Beyond the office – from data work to the platform economy; 7. AI-based technologies – new forms of invisibility and the 'ironies of automation'; 8. The computerization of care work; 9. The gendering of computer work. Part III. Gender and Design: 10. Revisiting the ethical-political perspective in technology design; 11. Contextualizing women's work; 12. Pathways to gender equality in design. Postscript; References; Index.

Citation
Balka, E., Wagner, I., Weibert, A., & Wulf, V. (2024). Gender and Technology at Work: From Workplace Studies to Social Justice in Design. Cambridge University Press. https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/gender-and-technology-at-work/9841D311C58497D4C881F47AFD5F3AF2