About this Research Topic
This Research Topic seeks to bring together contributions from feminist researchers, designers, and/or technologists to explore their relation to ‘digital worlds critically.’ In an attempt to look towards alternative worlds in academic publishing as well, we ask that all pieces should focus on dialogical approaches to understanding and/or writing – we see articles as being in dialogue among individual authors themselves, co-authors, texts, or technologies.
With this call we want to go beyond simple debates aimed at reaching mutual agreement and instead offer an opportunity for authors to enrich and nuance one another’s views with care, humility, and without the need to resolve debates or come to a singular common understanding fully. In Freire’s sense, we believe that without that attention to the dialogical approach, dialogue turns into “paternalistic manipulation.” This dialogical approach to understanding could shape the format of the paper (e.g., having multiple authors expressing their views in a written conversation), but could also shape the style or focus of the paper, such as a critical conversation and engagement with an existing text or a technology (e.g., through documentation of diffractive reading practices). This could also relate to the re-telling of individual experiences with bias, technologies, and our digital worlds through autoethnographic accounts, vignettes, conversations with our future selves, or other storytelling techniques. We explicitly invite community organizations to submit as well.
Authors can choose from a variety of article types, and for this Research Topic, "Perspectives" are especially welcome. For more information on the available article types, see here: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/human-dynamics#article-types
We welcome manuscripts that explore, but are not limited to, the following themes:
• How digital technologies and their design processes can be leveraged to genuinely promote gender equity in social, political, and economic life.
• Warnings about the potentially harmful consequences of digital technologies.
• Break the bias within women-focused (which often reads as white, western, middle-class women) technology research.
• Confronting practices and power structures of modernity through post-digital futures, using afrofuturist, decolonial, and/or ecofeminist perspectives.
• Enacting alternative presence in tech-related research and industry.
Keywords: Gender Equity, Gendered Technologies, Feminist Technologies, Bias, Stereotypes
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.