# Feminist Practices and Politics of Technology

<span lang="en-US">[![FeministInternetExchange600x338.jpg](https://explorefpi.apc.org/uploads/images/gallery/2022-06/scaled-1680-/feministinternetexchange600x338.jpg)](https://explorefpi.apc.org/uploads/images/gallery/2022-06/feministinternetexchange600x338.jpg)</span>

<span lang="en-US">The Feminist Practices and Politics of Technology is an approach to running technology-related activities. We know that </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">a feminist practice of technology cannot be devoid of a feminist analysis of the politics of technology</span>**</span><span lang="en-US">. The Feminist Practices and Politics of Technology are a set of principles that put the politics into practice! These principles can help you choose what activities to include in your conversation, and also help you decide on the best approach for carrying those activities out. </span>

<span lang="en-US">Why are the Feminist Practices and Politics of Technology important when hosting a conversation about the Feminist Principles of the Internet?</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Like the FPIs, these principles ensure that the experiences of women, gender-diverse and queer folks with technology </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">remain at the centre</span>**</span> <span lang="en-US">of our exploration and interrogation of technology and its development. </span>
- <span lang="en-US">When these principles are applied to how we run our activities, they ensure that those activities are not only about the technical or practical elements of technology, but mainly about the </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">political, social, economic and cultural paradigms</span>**</span> <span lang="en-US">that shape and affect the technical and practical elements. </span>
- <span lang="en-US">Finally, these principles remind us that how we teach about technology </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">must be adapted</span>**</span><span lang="en-US"> to the needs and priorities of those who are learning – not the other way around – and consider the diversity of ways in which knowledge and experiences are shared.</span>

#### **<span lang="en-US">Feminist Practices an</span><span lang="en-US">d Politics of Technology core principles</span>**

##### <span lang="en-US">Participation</span><span lang="en-US"> and inclusivity:   
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- <span lang="en-US">Since you as the facilitator have as m</span><span lang="en-US">uch to learn from your participants as they do from you, design your conversation in a way that encourages </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">exchange and discussion</span>**</span><span lang="en-US">! This gives space for different opinions and experiences to emerge.</span>
- <span lang="en-US">Remember there are various ways of learning and communicating! Choose activities that accommodate different learning styles. </span>

##### <span lang="en-US">Safety:</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Create an environment where participants feel safe to ask questions, raise issues and feel they can share information without being rejected, belittled or divulged without their consent. </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">Discuss with folks what they need</span>** </span><span lang="en-US">to feel safe when going through your event’s [Principles for Participation (Chapter 2)](https://explorefpi.apc.org/books/explore-fpis-toolkit/page/principle-4-principles-for-participation "Principle 4: Principles for participation")</span>
- <span lang="en-US">Take time to go through the risks associated with using digital technologies. Before embarking on a new activity, participants need to be </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">informed</span>** </span><span lang="en-US">of possible dangers, such as risks to their privacy when using social networking sites, for example.</span>
- <span lang="en-US">Integrate care into the practice of activities. Remember that </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">care looks different for different people</span>**</span><span lang="en-US">, and depends on who we are and where we are located in our lives and contexts. Be mindful of any stress that shows up in the room and address it where possible, so that everyone can show up fully for the collective during each activity.</span>

##### <span lang="en-US">Grounded in participants’ realities:</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Base conversations on the needs and realities of your participants. Take into account the contexts of your participants, the kinds of technologies folks use, and the ways in which they experience technology when deciding on what activities to include.</span>

##### <span lang="en-US">Appropriate, sustainable technologies:</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Related to the principle above, prioritise activities about technologies that participants are able to access, appropriate and use after the conversation. Free and open-source software (FOSS) should be given priority, but only if participants can access them and sustain their use. </span>

##### <span lang="en-US">Transparency and openness:</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Remember that you have your own agenda when hosting a local conversation. </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">Make your goals apparent</span>**</span> <span lang="en-US">to your participants. </span>
- <span lang="en-US">When planning the agenda of your conversation, include processes in which the expectations and goals of participants are surfaced and integrated into the agenda. These processes can take place either before or at the start of your event.</span>

##### <span lang="en-US">Creativity and strategy:</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Use the conversation as a space to look at technologies strategically and creatively! Figure out collectively how folks can appropriate them in ways that enhance their activism and lives. </span>

##### <span lang="en-US">Emphasis on the roles of women, gender diverse and queer folks in technology:</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Be aware that many folks have been erased from the histories of technology. Your conversation is the perfect space to correct this misrepresentation. When talking about technology, </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">highlight the contributions that women, gender diverse and queer folks have made</span>**</span><span lang="en-US"> to technology development. Ask participants of some of the women, gender diverse and queer folks they know who have shaped technology! Raising these examples is a powerful way of showing participants how much technology is meant for and is shaped by women, gender diverse and queer folk around the world. </span>

##### <span lang="en-US">Emphasis on our control of technology:</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Do not be hesitant to dive deeply into the ways in which you and your participants can take control of the internet and technologies.</span>
- <span lang="en-US">Provoke curiosity among participants around </span><span lang="en-US"><span style="color: #800080;">**how technologies wor**</span>k</span> <span lang="en-US">– not only how they can be used – by integrating hands-on tech activities into your conversation agenda.</span>

##### <span lang="en-US">Fun!</span>

- <span lang="en-US">Simply put, have fun at your event! Remember that </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">having fun is political</span>**</span><span lang="en-US">, because it breaks down barriers that negatively affect folks’ relationships to and control over technology. Fun enables ownership of technology and our online spaces and sustains curiosity and joy. </span>

<span lang="en-US">Now that we know </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">how to frame the way we talk about technology</span>**</span> <span lang="en-US">with our participants, and </span><span style="color: #800080;">**<span lang="en-US">how to approach the selection and facilitation of activities</span>**</span><span lang="en-US">, let’s take a look at a few examples of hands-on activities designed and practiced by feminist trainers from around the world!</span>