Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Christine Meyer
On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 11:25 AM, Ole Palnatoke Andersen 
palnat...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 7:41 PM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 ...
  It's a shame that my posts have been so bothersome for the list, I never
  knew that I was only making things worse, or not helping at all.

 I, for one, do not find your posts bothersome.
 I find no problem with having one gender-neutral article for barbers
 and hairdressers or for pimps and madams, but I do find it better to
 have *two* good articles on the respective subjects.


I agree.  The point of Wikipedia/Wikimedia as a whole is to have
high-quality articles, and any way we can do that, and do something about
the gender bias in both projects, the better.  I also understand Sarah's
defenseness.  It seems that content editors get the short end of the stick,
to the point that many good editors leave.  Keep up the good work, Sarah.

Christine
User:Figureskatingfan
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Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Béria Lima

 *I'm looking forward to hearing what Caroline would like to discuss, or
 Beria.*


Well Peter, when I come here (the day the list was created) the idea was to
create a list to discuss HOW TO REDUCE GENDER GAP (in caps to make it more
clear), that was the propose and that was the one I accepted.

So far, I saw lots of discussions about en.wiki articles and images, and
very little about the main objective of this list. I'm asking too much that
we actually start discuss what we came here to discuss? I don't think so.
_
*Béria Lima*
Wikimedia Portugal http://wikimedia.pt
(351) 963 953 042

*Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter
livre acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. Ajude-nos a
construir esse sonho. http://wikimedia.pt/Donativos*


On 25 December 2011 19:41, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

 Agreed. On Christmas (or any other day), I am thankful this list helps
 move things forward in a variety of ways, for a variety of different
 people. I'm looking forward to hearing what Caroline would like to discuss,
 or Beria. But glad to know your thoughts on pimp and madam sarah, and
 to see a suggested path to improving wikipedia content. I do enjoy that
 stuff the most. Collabotative encyclopedia writing is fucking awesome, and
 I love how everybody goes about it a little differently.

 Pete
 On Dec 25, 2011 11:25 AM, Ole Palnatoke Andersen palnat...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 7:41 PM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 ...
  It's a shame that my posts have been so bothersome for the list, I never
  knew that I was only making things worse, or not helping at all.

 I, for one, do not find your posts bothersome.
 I find no problem with having one gender-neutral article for barbers
 and hairdressers or for pimps and madams, but I do find it better to
 have *two* good articles on the respective subjects.


 Regards,
 Ole

 --
 http://palnatoke.org * @palnatoke * +4522934588

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Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Pete Forsyth
Hi Beria,

Yes, that is why I'm here as well. And I confess that right now, I do not
have a grand theory of how to fix it all; but I'm glad to talk about, or
work on, little ideas while the big ideas percolate.

Beria, you and I have both been here for a long time, both on the Gender
Gap list and on Wikimedia projects generally. And unless I'm missing
something, I don't think either of us have offered up a plan of how to
explore or reduce the gender gap. I agree with you that posts like Sarah's
are probably not getting to the core of the gender gap issue (and I suspect
she would agree) -- but personally, I don't think they do any harm, and I
do think they help people on this list find opportunities to work together
and begin to develop working relationships.

But..that's beside the point. How about if you and I both make an effort to
suggest issues this list could take on that would be useful? I would be
very interested to hear how you would like to approach things, and I could
probably manage to string together my thoughts in a useful way as well.
What do you think? Let's propose some alternative, or additional,
directions the discussion here might take.

-Pete


On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 11:56 AM, Béria Lima beria.l...@wikimedia.ptwrote:

 *I'm looking forward to hearing what Caroline would like to discuss, or
 Beria.*


 Well Peter, when I come here (the day the list was created) the idea was
 to create a list to discuss HOW TO REDUCE GENDER GAP (in caps to make it
 more clear), that was the propose and that was the one I accepted.

 So far, I saw lots of discussions about en.wiki articles and images, and
 very little about the main objective of this list. I'm asking too much that
 we actually start discuss what we came here to discuss? I don't think so.
 _
 *Béria Lima*
 Wikimedia Portugal http://wikimedia.pt
 (351) 963 953 042

 *Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter
 livre acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. Ajude-nos a
 construir esse sonho. http://wikimedia.pt/Donativos*



 On 25 December 2011 19:41, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

 Agreed. On Christmas (or any other day), I am thankful this list helps
 move things forward in a variety of ways, for a variety of different
 people. I'm looking forward to hearing what Caroline would like to discuss,
 or Beria. But glad to know your thoughts on pimp and madam sarah, and
 to see a suggested path to improving wikipedia content. I do enjoy that
 stuff the most. Collabotative encyclopedia writing is fucking awesome, and
 I love how everybody goes about it a little differently.

 Pete
 On Dec 25, 2011 11:25 AM, Ole Palnatoke Andersen palnat...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 7:41 PM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 ...
  It's a shame that my posts have been so bothersome for the list, I
 never
  knew that I was only making things worse, or not helping at all.

 I, for one, do not find your posts bothersome.
 I find no problem with having one gender-neutral article for barbers
 and hairdressers or for pimps and madams, but I do find it better to
 have *two* good articles on the respective subjects.


 Regards,
 Ole

 --
 http://palnatoke.org * @palnatoke * +4522934588

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Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Kevin Gorman
To me, article differentials like this are one of the most interesting
manifestations of the gender gap, and are worth talking about on this list.
 Content that deals primarily with women is systematically underdeveloped
throughout the projects, and that is a big deal.  The gendergap would still
be disturbing even if this weren't the case - but to me at least, the
systemic underdevelopment of content is probably the single most worrisome
issue involved.

I conduct physical outreach about gendergap issues in the bay area on a
regular basis - I think I have five talks/lectures/brownbags currently
scheduled in the next month and a half.  This sort of example is great,
because it helps people understand why Wikimedia's massive demographic gaps
are a serious problem.  Obviously a single example can't prove a systemic
problem, but using concrete examples makes the issue much more real to some
people than just saying According to researchers at NYU, we're XX% more
likely to be missing important biographies of women than Britannica is.  I
usually mention the hairdresser/barber example, and it's probably been more
effective at generating interest than any other single thing I've mentioned
- at this point I'm getting emails from people I've never met who want to
get involved after having had that example relayed to them by people who I
have talked to.

So, thanks Sarah, this specific example will work itself in to a talk in
the near future :)


Kevin Gorman
User:Kgorman-ucb
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Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Laura Hale
On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 7:04 AM, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Beria,

 Beria, you and I have both been here for a long time, both on the Gender
 Gap list and on Wikimedia projects generally. And unless I'm missing
 something, I don't think either of us have offered up a plan of how to
 explore or reduce the gender gap. I agree with you that posts like Sarah's
 are probably not getting to the core of the gender gap issue (and I suspect
 she would agree) -- but personally, I don't think they do any harm, and I
 do think they help people on this list find opportunities to work together
 and begin to develop working relationships.

 But..that's beside the point. How about if you and I both make an effort
 to suggest issues this list could take on that would be useful? I would be
 very interested to hear how you would like to approach things, and I could
 probably manage to string together my thoughts in a useful way as well.
 What do you think? Let's propose some alternative, or additional,
 directions the discussion here might take.


Several women involved with chapter leadership are helping to organise two
conferences: One for women's leadership in the WMF movement, one for the
gender gap.  That's a major, major accomplishment.  These both be firsts of
their kind and demonstrate leadership from women.  The list has been
fantastic in some ways in terms of inspiring the creation of both.  I'd
love to see more discussion about these topics, and solutions for how to
support women in leadership positions around the globe. It would be
fantastic if some of the members here could help promote the women's
leadership conference (which is not about increasing female editing) at
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiWomenCamp . :)  By supporting women, by
helping attract women to leadership positions, we should hopefully improve
the situation down the line.  That's one of the beautiful things about
femocracy. :)

It would also be fantastic to draw more attention to these women who are
successful, determine how we can support them, continue to support them.
 This list is often focused on American women on English Wikipedia to the
exclusion of all else. Let's really work on celebrating women around the
globe.  There is a Hungarian woman who has done hugely awesome things for
Wikimedia Hungary.  There is another woman from Asia who helped her chapter
get a million dollar grant.  There is a Dutch woman who helped organise
GLAM Camp.  Norway's involvement with Wiki Loves Monuments owes a lot to a
few female members.  Argentina has four women on their Chapter board.
 Italy has several women who do high level GLAM work and coordinate
projects across multiple countries.

Before we go much further though, I think we do need to document what the
status of the gender gap is.  Can you help improve
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiWomenCamp/FAQ/Perspectives those
perspectives?  I don't think you can begin to fix the problem unless you
know what it is. This is an important first step in terms of beginning to
understand the scope of the problem.





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Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Béria Lima
Is kinda funny that you ask what I'm doing, Peter. Sounds like unless I'm
being paid for WMF to deal with Gender Gap I shouldn't have a voice, and
shut the f*** up. But anyway

You wanna know what I'm doing? I tell you: I'm organizing not one, but 2
conferences with focus in the women in this movement.  The first one is the
- already announced here - http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiWomenCamp
and the second (1 day after this one) is a Gender Gap specify conference
who will happens in the same place and city (more about this one soon). I
also already made a presentation about Gender Gap to an event in India:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gender_Gap_in_Wikimedia_projects.pdf

Now I'm qualified to talk?
_
*Béria Lima*
Wikimedia Portugal http://wikimedia.pt
(351) 963 953 042

*Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter
livre acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. Ajude-nos a
construir esse sonho. http://wikimedia.pt/Donativos*


On 25 December 2011 20:04, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Beria,

 Yes, that is why I'm here as well. And I confess that right now, I do not
 have a grand theory of how to fix it all; but I'm glad to talk about, or
 work on, little ideas while the big ideas percolate.

 Beria, you and I have both been here for a long time, both on the Gender
 Gap list and on Wikimedia projects generally. And unless I'm missing
 something, I don't think either of us have offered up a plan of how to
 explore or reduce the gender gap. I agree with you that posts like Sarah's
 are probably not getting to the core of the gender gap issue (and I suspect
 she would agree) -- but personally, I don't think they do any harm, and I
 do think they help people on this list find opportunities to work together
 and begin to develop working relationships.

 But..that's beside the point. How about if you and I both make an effort
 to suggest issues this list could take on that would be useful? I would be
 very interested to hear how you would like to approach things, and I could
 probably manage to string together my thoughts in a useful way as well.
 What do you think? Let's propose some alternative, or additional,
 directions the discussion here might take.

 -Pete


 On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 11:56 AM, Béria Lima beria.l...@wikimedia.ptwrote:

 *I'm looking forward to hearing what Caroline would like to discuss, or
 Beria.*


 Well Peter, when I come here (the day the list was created) the idea was
 to create a list to discuss HOW TO REDUCE GENDER GAP (in caps to make it
 more clear), that was the propose and that was the one I accepted.

 So far, I saw lots of discussions about en.wiki articles and images, and
 very little about the main objective of this list. I'm asking too much that
 we actually start discuss what we came here to discuss? I don't think so.
 _
 *Béria Lima*
 Wikimedia Portugal http://wikimedia.pt
 (351) 963 953 042

 *Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter
 livre acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. Ajude-nos a
 construir esse sonho. http://wikimedia.pt/Donativos*



 On 25 December 2011 19:41, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

 Agreed. On Christmas (or any other day), I am thankful this list helps
 move things forward in a variety of ways, for a variety of different
 people. I'm looking forward to hearing what Caroline would like to discuss,
 or Beria. But glad to know your thoughts on pimp and madam sarah, and
 to see a suggested path to improving wikipedia content. I do enjoy that
 stuff the most. Collabotative encyclopedia writing is fucking awesome, and
 I love how everybody goes about it a little differently.

 Pete
 On Dec 25, 2011 11:25 AM, Ole Palnatoke Andersen palnat...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 7:41 PM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 ...
  It's a shame that my posts have been so bothersome for the list, I
 never
  knew that I was only making things worse, or not helping at all.

 I, for one, do not find your posts bothersome.
 I find no problem with having one gender-neutral article for barbers
 and hairdressers or for pimps and madams, but I do find it better to
 have *two* good articles on the respective subjects.


 Regards,
 Ole

 --
 http://palnatoke.org * @palnatoke * +4522934588

 ___
 Gendergap mailing list
 Gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
 https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/gendergap


 ___
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 Gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
 https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/gendergap



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 Gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
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Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Ms. Anne Frazer
On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 8:00 AM, Laura Hale la...@fanhistory.com wrote:
On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 7:04, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

Laura, the entirety of your email is spot on list and I just want to thank you 
for your clarity on this matter and for demonstrating what this list could 
really be discussing. By focusing on supporting women in, and into, leadership 
positions we recognise the exponential potential for greater numbers of women 
to be involved, to be active, in the global movement - and when encouraging 
female participation we can learn to realise we don't need to tell them what to 
do, what to edit, but simply help open up the pathways to everything. 

By way of example, a major political party in Australia has a grassroots 
organisastion (a structurally integrated significant organisation) called 
'Emily's List'  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EMILY%27s_List_Australia, itself 
inspired by a USA model. Now I'm not here espousing 'what women want' is best 
served by an Australian or a American model of pro-active involvement in 
championing women's involvement, because I have no doubt there is also 
mirror-organisations throughout the northern and southern hemispheres. I'm 
simply explaining that which I know about at the same time realising the 
limitations of my knowledge. The significance to Wikimedia of this type of 
women's model for organising, is that it focuses it's efforts on not only 
increasing female participation but on training them into positions of 
leadership; that is, training females on what, and how, and about, all aspects 
of the movement. When a female has the knowledge they can do.

Anne 

  - Original Message - 
  From: Laura Hale 
  To: Increasing female participation in Wikimedia projects 
  Sent: Monday, December 26, 2011 8:00 AM
  Subject: Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)





  On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 7:04 AM, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

Hi Beria,


Beria, you and I have both been here for a long time, both on the Gender 
Gap list and on Wikimedia projects generally. And unless I'm missing something, 
I don't think either of us have offered up a plan of how to explore or reduce 
the gender gap. I agree with you that posts like Sarah's are probably not 
getting to the core of the gender gap issue (and I suspect she would agree) -- 
but personally, I don't think they do any harm, and I do think they help people 
on this list find opportunities to work together and begin to develop working 
relationships.


But..that's beside the point. How about if you and I both make an effort to 
suggest issues this list could take on that would be useful? I would be very 
interested to hear how you would like to approach things, and I could probably 
manage to string together my thoughts in a useful way as well. What do you 
think? Let's propose some alternative, or additional, directions the discussion 
here might take.


  Several women involved with chapter leadership are helping to organise two 
conferences: One for women's leadership in the WMF movement, one for the gender 
gap.  That's a major, major accomplishment.  These both be firsts of their kind 
and demonstrate leadership from women.  The list has been fantastic in some 
ways in terms of inspiring the creation of both.  I'd love to see more 
discussion about these topics, and solutions for how to support women in 
leadership positions around the globe. It would be fantastic if some of the 
members here could help promote the women's leadership conference (which is not 
about increasing female editing) at 
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiWomenCamp . :)  By supporting women, by 
helping attract women to leadership positions, we should hopefully improve the 
situation down the line.  That's one of the beautiful things about femocracy. 
:)  


  It would also be fantastic to draw more attention to these women who are 
successful, determine how we can support them, continue to support them.  This 
list is often focused on American women on English Wikipedia to the exclusion 
of all else. Let's really work on celebrating women around the globe.  There is 
a Hungarian woman who has done hugely awesome things for Wikimedia Hungary.  
There is another woman from Asia who helped her chapter get a million dollar 
grant.  There is a Dutch woman who helped organise GLAM Camp.  Norway's 
involvement with Wiki Loves Monuments owes a lot to a few female members.  
Argentina has four women on their Chapter board.  Italy has several women who 
do high level GLAM work and coordinate projects across multiple countries.


  Before we go much further though, I think we do need to document what the 
status of the gender gap is.  Can you help improve 
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiWomenCamp/FAQ/Perspectives those 
perspectives?  I don't think you can begin to fix the problem unless you know 
what it is. This is an important first step in terms of beginning to understand

Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Laura Hale
On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 12:20 PM, Ms. Anne Frazer fraz...@bigpond.comwrote:

 **

 Laura, the entirety of your email is spot on list and I just want to thank
 you for your clarity on this matter and for demonstrating what this list
 could really be discussing. By focusing on supporting women in, and into,
 leadership positions we recognise the exponential potential for greater
 numbers of women to be involved, to be active, in the global movement -
 and when encouraging female participation we can learn to realise we don't
 need to tell them what to do, what to edit, but simply help open up the
 pathways to everything.



Thank you for the kind words. :)  And yes, supporting women in leadership
is extremely important.  They will bring other women with them.  They have
unique networks that we might not be able to reach otherwise.  They often
understand local cultures better, or know people who can do things.


 I'm simply explaining that which I know about at the same time realising
 the limitations of my knowledge. The significance to Wikimedia of this type
 of women's model for organising, is that it focuses it's efforts on not
 only increasing female participation but on training them into positions of
 leadership; that is, training females on what, and how, and
 about, all aspects of the movement. When a female has the knowledge they
 can do.



Opportunities for leadership are probably a great motivational tool to get
women involved, especially if they have a built in support structure to
help them with their activities.  I don't know if such a structure
currently exists now on a wider level, or if it is dependent on chapters to
do good work and be inclusive and for leaders in individual chapters to
make sure that women make connections to allow them to lead.  I suspect
what happens now is we try to recruit people, get a few women who are self
motivated and they are left to fend for themselves in terms of developing
these networks to help them.  And these networks are fundamental to
success.  Why do feel like I've been so successful with my GLAM work?
 Because I had a few existing GLAM people who were tremendously supportive
of me.  Why have I felt so successful recently inside my chapter?  Because
there are women I can turn to and ask for help.  Can I and do I get this
same support from men?  Yes, and I'm grateful to them.  I love working with
them… (Australia has had a number of men work on our perspective page.
 Fantastic and I love it!) but I feel like there is something special about
working with other women.  Providing a support network, going out and
developing our female leaders, encouraging them to be involved is key to
not just fixing the gender gap but to increasing participation over all
around the globe.  If we're looking for a solution, I think this is the
first one we should be looking at: How do provide support to women in a
global context to support their already good work?  How do we find and
nurture additional female leaders?


-- 
twitter: purplepopple
blog: ozziesport.com
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Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Ms. Anne Frazer
Again, you raise important questions addressing how we can find and nurture 
women in the global context. I also appreciate your positive comments about the 
men in Australia in the wikimedia movement. In the Australian Chapter men and 
women have traditionally worked side by side in our endeavours to support and 
grow our mission. In particular the men and women who have and continue to make 
up the committee, operate in an egalitarian manner, and the male leadership 
continually demonstrates and shows appreciation for an awareness of women's 
involvement in the projects and the running of the Chapter, as do the women for 
the men. So I guess we are lucky in the knowledge that it is to a large degree 
the Australian way of doing things. We are however, both the men and the women, 
aware of the need to support and take action for improvements across the board 
and the global movement. 

Thanks,
Anne

On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 1:19 PM Laura Hale la...@fanhistory.com wrote:
  - Original Message - 
  From: Laura Hale 
  To: Increasing female participation in Wikimedia projects 
  Sent: Monday, December 26, 2011 1:19 PM
  Subject: Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)





  On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 12:20 PM, Ms. Anne Frazer fraz...@bigpond.com wrote:


Laura, the entirety of your email is spot on list and I just want to thank 
you for your clarity on this matter and for demonstrating what this list could 
really be discussing. By focusing on supporting women in, and into, leadership 
positions we recognise the exponential potential for greater numbers of women 
to be involved, to be active, in the global movement - and when encouraging 
female participation we can learn to realise we don't need to tell them what to 
do, what to edit, but simply help open up the pathways to everything. 



  Thank you for the kind words. :)  And yes, supporting women in leadership is 
extremely important.  They will bring other women with them.  They have unique 
networks that we might not be able to reach otherwise.  They often understand 
local cultures better, or know people who can do things.  

I'm simply explaining that which I know about at the same time realising 
the limitations of my knowledge. The significance to Wikimedia of this type of 
women's model for organising, is that it focuses it's efforts on not only 
increasing female participation but on training them into positions of 
leadership; that is, training females on what, and how, and about, all aspects 
of the movement. When a female has the knowledge they can do.



  Opportunities for leadership are probably a great motivational tool to get 
women involved, especially if they have a built in support structure to help 
them with their activities.  I don't know if such a structure currently exists 
now on a wider level, or if it is dependent on chapters to do good work and be 
inclusive and for leaders in individual chapters to make sure that women make 
connections to allow them to lead.  I suspect what happens now is we try to 
recruit people, get a few women who are self motivated and they are left to 
fend for themselves in terms of developing these networks to help them.  And 
these networks are fundamental to success.  Why do feel like I've been so 
successful with my GLAM work?  Because I had a few existing GLAM people who 
were tremendously supportive of me.  Why have I felt so successful recently 
inside my chapter?  Because there are women I can turn to and ask for help.  
Can I and do I get this same support from men?  Yes, and I'm grateful to them.  
I love working with them… (Australia has had a number of men work on our 
perspective page.  Fantastic and I love it!) but I feel like there is something 
special about working with other women.  Providing a support network, going out 
and developing our female leaders, encouraging them to be involved is key to 
not just fixing the gender gap but to increasing participation over all around 
the globe.  If we're looking for a solution, I think this is the first one we 
should be looking at: How do provide support to women in a global context to 
support their already good work?  How do we find and nurture additional female 
leaders?




  -- 
  twitter: purplepopple
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Re: [Gendergap] Bothersome? (Re: Pimp)

2011-12-25 Thread Pete Forsyth
Beria,

It looks like we misunderstood each other pretty badly -- sorry if I didn't
express myself clearly. I'm genuinely interested in the kind of strategy
people on this list believe would improve gender-related issues. That
includes you.

Thanks for the reminder about the conference you're planning. I'm aware of
it, and am glad it's happening. My question (which was meant as an
invitation, not a challenge) is about your general thinking around the
conference. What is your theory about how to improve gender-related issues
in the Wikimedia world? (and how will things like this conference fit into
that thinking?) I'm not saying that I know the right theory (though I
suppose I have some ideas); when you reacted strongly against a specific
approach earlier in this thread, it made me wonder what your general
thinking is, and what kinds of tactics you *would* like to see. If you'd
like to share that, please consider this an invitation.

I'm not sure where the part about Wikimedia staff comes in. I'm not a WMF
employee, and haven't been for nearly a year; but even if I were, I don't
think it has anything to do with who gets to talk about what. As far as I'm
concerned, this list is not a WMF-specific space.

-Pete
[[User:Peteforsyth]] on English Wikipedia etc.


On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 1:03 PM, Béria Lima beria.l...@wikimedia.pt wrote:

 Is kinda funny that you ask what I'm doing, Peter. Sounds like unless I'm
 being paid for WMF to deal with Gender Gap I shouldn't have a voice, and
 shut the f*** up. But anyway

 You wanna know what I'm doing? I tell you: I'm organizing not one, but 2
 conferences with focus in the women in this movement.  The first one is the
 - already announced here - http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiWomenCamp
 and the second (1 day after this one) is a Gender Gap specify conference
 who will happens in the same place and city (more about this one soon). I
 also already made a presentation about Gender Gap to an event in India:
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gender_Gap_in_Wikimedia_projects.pdf

 Now I'm qualified to talk?
 _
 *Béria Lima*
 Wikimedia Portugal http://wikimedia.pt
 (351) 963 953 042

 *Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter
 livre acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. Ajude-nos a
 construir esse sonho. http://wikimedia.pt/Donativos*


 On 25 December 2011 20:04, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Beria,

 Yes, that is why I'm here as well. And I confess that right now, I do not
 have a grand theory of how to fix it all; but I'm glad to talk about, or
 work on, little ideas while the big ideas percolate.

 Beria, you and I have both been here for a long time, both on the Gender
 Gap list and on Wikimedia projects generally. And unless I'm missing
 something, I don't think either of us have offered up a plan of how to
 explore or reduce the gender gap. I agree with you that posts like Sarah's
 are probably not getting to the core of the gender gap issue (and I suspect
 she would agree) -- but personally, I don't think they do any harm, and I
 do think they help people on this list find opportunities to work together
 and begin to develop working relationships.

 But..that's beside the point. How about if you and I both make an effort
 to suggest issues this list could take on that would be useful? I would be
 very interested to hear how you would like to approach things, and I could
 probably manage to string together my thoughts in a useful way as well.
 What do you think? Let's propose some alternative, or additional,
 directions the discussion here might take.

 -Pete


 On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 11:56 AM, Béria Lima beria.l...@wikimedia.ptwrote:

 *I'm looking forward to hearing what Caroline would like to discuss, or
 Beria.*


 Well Peter, when I come here (the day the list was created) the idea was
 to create a list to discuss HOW TO REDUCE GENDER GAP (in caps to make it
 more clear), that was the propose and that was the one I accepted.

 So far, I saw lots of discussions about en.wiki articles and images, and
 very little about the main objective of this list. I'm asking too much that
 we actually start discuss what we came here to discuss? I don't think so.
 _
 *Béria Lima*
 Wikimedia Portugal http://wikimedia.pt
 (351) 963 953 042

 *Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter
 livre acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. Ajude-nos a
 construir esse sonho. http://wikimedia.pt/Donativos*



 On 25 December 2011 19:41, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:

 Agreed. On Christmas (or any other day), I am thankful this list helps
 move things forward in a variety of ways, for a variety of different
 people. I'm looking forward to hearing what Caroline would like to discuss,
 or Beria. But glad to know your thoughts on pimp and madam sarah, and
 to see a suggested path to improving wikipedia content. I do enjoy that
 stuff the most. Collabotative