About
WISENET (Women in ICTs Shared Excellence Network) is a convening platform that aims to leverage the experience, resources and connections of the international ICT community to better the situation of women, their communities and their countries. The platform will include the redesigned blog, news, events, and research.
WISENET is a key part of the International Bureau’s Women’s Initiative: Going Mobile and Connecting Women. Through the Initiative, we hope to collaborate on how to best use ICTs for development and motivate women to pursue careers in technology.
Neither the Women’s Initiative nor WISENET are static; we are actively seeking ideas to make it relevant and useful. We expect it to grow and change to respond to developments in ICTs. If you have any ideas on how to improve this platform, please contact us at wisenet@fcc.gov
Recent News
-
Video: FCC Hosts TechGirls
8/21/13On July 11, the FCC welcomed four ambitious girls from the Middle East and North Africa who are participating in the State Department’s TechGirls exchange program.
-
The World Marks Girls in ICT Day
4/25/13Countries around the world, as well as the International Telecommunication Union, are hosting events for Girls in ICT.
-
UN Broadband Commission Sets New Gender Target
3/17/13The ambitious new target is designed to spur female access to the power of ICTs by targeting “gender equality in broadband access by the year 2020
-
Google Grants $1.2M to Help Analyze Female Roles in TV, Film
12/6/12As part of its Global Impact Awards, Google has given a $1.2 million grant to the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media for the development of technology to help analyze female portrayals in children’s media, an area where an earlier report by the Institute had indicated significant gender inequality.
-
Google Apps Developer Challenge 2012 Now Open
6/12/12Google's 2012 apps developer contest, the Google Apps Developer Challenege, is now open globally, and women are especially encouraged to enter
-
Vital Voices Global Partnership Honors Female Leaders
6/5/12Female activists from around the world were honored at the Kennedy Center by the Vital Voices Global Partnership June 6, 2012.
-
How Women are Changing the Tech World
6/4/12A look into the current state of women in the tech world, especially their increasing role in start-up companies.
-
STEM Women All Stars Hit the Road
6/30/12In April, at the release of the White House Girls in STEM video, some of the Nation's top women scientists and engineers urged girls to open their mind to careers in these fields.
-
Mobile Phones Offer Indian Women a Better Way of Life
5/22/12For women like Mrs. Gupta access to mobile phones can break the pattern of marital isolation in India…
-
DigiGirlz Day Highlights Information Technology Career Opportunities for Women
4/27/12 by Tricities.comMicrosoft's DigiGirlz Day strives to provide young women with the necessary expertise …
-
Why Aren't More Women in Science Fields?
4/27/12 by PBSPBS NewsHour's Judy Woodruff interviewed Klawe about her experiences bringing more young women into science fields….
-
Open ICT opportunities for women, ITU chief urges member nations
4/24/12 by Technology Times OnlineThe International Telecommunication Union (ITU) has urged its members states to open ICTs opportunities for girls and women …
-
Women At Work: Soundbytes, Statistics Of Women Who Lead (Infographic)
4/23/12 by Angie Chang, ForbesIn 2012, women continue to leave their mark in business in industries around the world. …
-
Jocelyn Goldfein, Facebook Engineer, Explains why it matters there aren't more girl geeks
4/6/12 by Bianca BoskerJocelyn Goldfein has a simple reason for wanting to increase the number of female engineers: She's tired of meetings where she's surrounded entirely by men….
-
Women in Tech: It's time to drop the old stereotypes
4/3/12 Kate HilpernA career in technology can be as varied, exciting and glamorous as you want it to be - and that's not just for men….
-
Who said women aren't good at IT?
4/3/12 by Sheila FlavellA guest blog by Sheila Flavell, COO of FDM Group, and winner of Cisco 2012 everywoman in Technology Awards Leader of the Year.
-
Giving Women the Access Code
4/2/12 by Katie HafnerDr. Maria Hawe, president of Harvey Mudd College, talks about the underrepresentation of women in math and sciences…
-
Women in Technology Announces Finalists for Leadership Awards
4/2/12 by Carl PierreFrom our extensive coverage of D.C. Tech and the dynamic women that have helped build our stellar startup community…
-
Smart Girls - getting women back into the ICT workforce
3/27/12 by Mike Bantick, IT WireBalancing a high-flying ICT career with creating a family is a huge challenge for the modern woman…
-
Minority women still most underrepresented in science despite progress
3/27/12 by physorg.comThirty-five years after a landmark report documented minority women as the most underrepresented individuals in science, engineering, medicine and dentistry…
-
Tech Weekly: Sexism in the Technology Industry
3/27/12 by Aleks Krotoski, Charles Arthur and Gia MilinovichAttitudes to women in tech…
-
More Women Turn to Tech
3/22/12 by Tessa ReedWomen are becoming "early adopters" of technology…
-
Women in Tech: How One Entrepreneur Blazed a Trail
3/21/12 by Christina WarrenFor Marvell Technology Group co-founder Weili Dai, the connected lifestyle is the future for not only consumers…
-
A Practical Vision: Simple Technology that Transforms Lives
3/20/12 by Ken BanksGuest post by Simon Trace of Practical Action…
-
Empowering Women with Mobile Services
3/16/12 David DeansThe introduction of mobile banking, education, agriculture, and other services is already helping to empower millions of women…
-
Solving the Pipeline Problem: How to Get More Women in Tech
3/15/12 by Anneke Jong, ForbesJong identifies the problems and solutions for not just have "women in tech" but having "technical women"…
-
Women in Technology: More role models needed
3/15/12 by Kayleigh Bateman, Computer WeeklyTech needs more women. Women and girls at all levels need to be engaged by technology..
-
Women Take the Lead through ICT
3/14/12 by USAID/West Bank/GazaYoung women are excelling in leadership positions through programs at three Youth Development Resource Centers (YDRCs) in the West Bank…
-
Brookings Institution Celebrates International Women's Day
3/8/12 Brookings InstitutionIn honor of International Women's Day, the Brookings Institution created a series of short videos …
-
Female Tech Entrepreneurs are instigating a revolution
3/8/12 by Heidi Hautala and Janamitra DevanIn 2010, two Kenyan women, Jamila Abbas and Susan Oguya, were angered by newspaper reports about middlemen exploiting small farmers…
-
Why we need to rethink 'Women in Tech"
2/24/2012 by Anneke Jong, The Daily MuseJong addresses the discrepancy between "women in tech" and "technical women
-
5 Start-ups to watch from the Women 2.0 PITCH Conference
2/17/2012 by Adrian Granzella Larssen, The Daily MuseHighlights from the PITCH Conference in Silicon Valley, where nearly 1,000 women gathered for talks by industry giants, networking events, mentoring lunches…
Events
-
FCC Celebrates Girls in ICT Day
The FCC is hosting a Twitter chat in honor of International Girls in Information and Communication Technology Day.
-
Third Symposium on Gender in Media
Los Angeles, CAThe mission of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media is to dramatically improve the representation and portrayals of female characters in entertainment targeting children 11 and under. The Symposium brings together over 300 leading entertainment and media CEOs, directors, writers, producers, corporations and organizations.
-
Girls, Women and ICT Conference
Amsterdam IBM and VHTOOn International Women's Day IBM and VHTO organized a conference on girls, women and ICT. Marja van Bijsterveldt, Minister of Education, Culture and Science will be present.
-
Girls and ICT Day
New York City, NY ITUDespite the obvious benefits, many girls never even consider a career in ICTs. There is a lack of awareness among students, teachers and parents on what a career in ICT could offer. Attitudes can change when girls are invited into companies and government agencies to meet ICT professionals and see what life is like on the job.
-
Women and Girls in ICT
Geneva ITUThis year's theme, 'Women and Girls in ICT', highlights the role technology can play in empowering women worldwide. As part of the event, ITU will present the annual World Telecommunication and Information Society Award to three eminent personalities who have contributed to leveraging the catalytic role of ICTs in creating far-reaching opportunities for women and girls, helping eliminate gender disparities and empowering them to reach their goals and aspirations.
-
#AskAg Twitter Chat
Online Event USAIDAsk & Answer: The Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index. The "Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index" (WEAI) is the first measure to directly capture women's empowerment and inclusion levels in the agricultural sector. The WEAI focuses on five areas: decisions over agricultural production, power over productive resources such as land and livestock, decisions over income, leadership in the community, and time use.
-
Get Online Week
Brussels, Belgium European CommissionHighlights the continuing demand for skilled ICT users and professionals to drive a competitive and innovative Europe. This exciting campaign seeks to inform students, young professionals and SMEs about the range of opportunities that ICT-related jobs present.
-
Promoting ICTs for Women and Girls in Africa
Zambia AnakaziJoin us on Saturday April 21, 9am PST, 17hrs GMT and 18hrs CAT as we speak to the Director General of the Zambia Information and Communications Technology Authority (ZICTA) Mrs. Margaret Chalwe-Mudenda about the revolution in information and communication technologies (ICTs) and its vast implications for the developing world.
Research
-
ICT Initiatives, Women and Work in Developing Countries: Reinforcing or Changing Gender Inequalities in South India?
Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are increasingly used by developing countries in strategies that see the new technology as having the potential to deliver economic growth, employment, skills generation and empowerment. This paper argues that ICTs as a form of new technology are socially deterministic, with varied implications for women in terms of employment and empowerment dependent on the context within which the ICTs are utilised.
-
Because I Am a Girl: The State of the World's Girls in 2010. Digital and Urban Frontiers: Girls in a Changing Landscape
For girls, the new world of ICTs brings old and new, rich and poor, opportunity and danger, up against each other more dramatically, more immediately and perhaps more damagingly than in any other era. Access to new information technologies and the media has exposed young women to new ideas and ways of thinking that open up huge possibilities and potentially new dangers.
-
Women & Mobile: A Global Opportunity, A study on the mobile phone gender gap in low and middle-income countries
Mobile phone ownership in low and middle-income countries has skyrocketed in the past several years. But a woman is still 21% less liekly to own a mobile phone than a man. Closing this gender gap would bring the benefits of mobile phones to an additional 300 million women. By extending the benefits of mobile phone ownership to more women, a host of social and economic goals can be achieved.
-
Connectivity: How mobile phones, computers and the internet can catalyze women's entrepreneurship. India: A Case Study
Research focused on India to examine how ICTs are changing economic opportunities for poor and low-income women. India is a dynamic setting for three important trends: a rapidly expanding ICT sector, an increased role for women in the marketplace, and an emerging economic and policy environment poised for growth and social inclusion. The confluence of these trends is sparking a range of initiatives that use ICTs to engage women in business.
-
Portraits: A Glimpse Into the Lives of Women at the Base of the Pyramid
The mobile industry – and indeed much of the world – knows little about the lives, struggles and aspirations of women at the BoP. Yet these women represent one of the largest opportunities for new users for the mobile industry, while also being the most likely to see real and substantial improvements in their lives through mobile services which could, for example, provide crucial healthcare information or give them the tools to set up businesses to move out of poverty.
-
Empowering Women through ICT
The empowering use of ICTs is closely connected to socio-economic development, and this potential towards social transformation demands that everyone should have access. Prevailing inequalities in access to ICTs throughout the world suggest that many groups are hindered by their social and economic circumstances from developing a relationship with ICT. In relation to women, this inequality is referred to as "the gender digital divide".
-
Women in the Workplace
Gender discrimination may be banned; in its place many women still encounter invisible and yet very real barriers to promotion and wage increases. As former president and CEO of Hewlett-Packard Carly Fiorina once said in an interview, "it's clear that there aren't enough women in business, and the stereotypes will exist as long as there aren't enough of us." Researchers at Thomson Reuters decided to examine gender equality within the workplace, using its ASSET4 database on environmental, social and corporate governance matters.
-
World Development Report 2012: Gender Equality and Development
"The lives of girls and women have changed dramatically over the past quarter century. The pace of change has been astonishing in some areas, but in others, progress toward gender equality has been limited—even in developed countries.
This year's World Development Report: Gender Equality and Development argues that gender equality is a core development objective in its own right. It is also smart economics. Greater gender equality can enhance productivity, improve development outcomes for the next generation, and make institutions more representative." -
Gender, Information Technology and Developing Countries: An Analytic Study
Information technology (IT) has become a potent force in transforming social, economic, and political life globally. Without its incorporation into the information age, there is little chance for countries or regions to develop. More and more concern is being shown about the impact of those left on the other side of the digital divide- the division between the information "haves" and "have nots." Most women within developing countries are in the deepest part of the divide further removed from the information age than the men whose poverty they share.
-
Revisiting Women's Participation in Science and Technology: Emerging Challenges and Agenda for Reform
The 21st century is witnessing the ever-increasing role of science and technology in all aspects of life. Science and technology offer the prospect of finding solutions for may global challenges, including gender equality and the empowering of women. This report explores how women's role in advancing and using science and technology could be improved, and how science and technology impact women. Exploiting the talents of women should no longer be looked at only from the perspective of gender equality: governments should regard women's involvement in science and technology as an essential component of economic development.
-
Mobile Divides: Gender, Socioeconomic Status and Mobile Phone Use in Rwanda
"We combine data from a field survey with transaction log data from a mobile phone operator to provide new insight into daily patterns of mobile phone use in Rwanda. The evidence in this paper suggests that phones are disproportionately owned and used by the privileged strata of Rwandan society."
-
Mobile Technology for Community Health in Ghana: What it is and what Grameen Foundation has learned so far
Grameen Foundation's experience of designing and implementing a mobile health program in Ghana can provide insights for the broader field and specific implementation. A fundamental tenet of Grameen from program designs to management plans to failures.
-
Striving and Surviving: Exploring the Lives of Women at the Base of the Pyramid
The mobile industry – and indeed much of the world – knows little about the lives, struggles and aspirations of women at the BoP. Yet these women represent one of the largest opportunities for new users for the mobile industry, while also being the most likely to see real and substantial improvements in their lives through mobile services which could, for example, provide crucial healthcare information or give them the tools to businesses to move out of poverty.
-
Realising the mWomen Opportunity: A Framework for Designing the mWomen Business Case
The driving theory of the GSMA mWomen Programme is that if the mobile industry commercially focuses on the women consumer in emerging markets this will directly lead to social and economic gains for those women, their families and their communities. In order to achieve these objectives, the GSMA mWomen Programme worked throughout 2011 with mobile network operators (MNOs) in key markets to develop the mWomen opportunity and create a framework for understanding the key profitability drivers.
-
A Bright Future in ICTs Opportunities for a New Generation of Women
The future of the ICT sector is exciting. These are unchartered waters open to creativity, innovation and entirely new ways of working, interacting and learning that should appeal to women and men alike. This summary report surveys the global trends in women's professional development and employment in the information and communication technology (ICT) sector, and offers a sample of the range of national policies, training programmes and initiatives targeting girls and women as potential students and professionals.
-
Training Manual on Gender and Climate Change
Among development and environmental institutions, and in the climate change arena in general, there is a need to develop a common understanding of the linkages between gender and climate change, using a language that policy makers and climate scientists can understand. The training manual draws on existing in-house materials (research data, analyses and extracts from international frameworks) that have been adapted or expanded but also includes newly compiled case studies to illustrate the concepts in each module. Module 6 details gender-sensitive strategies on technology development.
Partners
Coming Soon