WikiWomenCamp was a very valuable experience for those of us that
attended. We all learned a great deal, had the opportunity to network
with other women and, by and large had our participation with the
movement validated as a positive thing. I also believe, having talked to
several participants and the granting bodies that helped make this
conference possible, that these outcomes validate the money spent
bringing these women together and the time we took out of our every day
lives to attend.
Looking forward, there are several positive outcomes from this
conference and things participants plan to do going forward that can use
community support and that will support the community. These include:
Conference specific outcomes:
* Sue Gardner attending the conference means those of us who attended
can go back to our communities, especially those of us outside Europe
and the USA, and affirm that Sue Gardner supports women working on
issues brought up at the conference and working on a global local
solution to the gendergap, and that this is not just a problem for
English Wikipedia in the United States.
* We are planning to have this event again and believe we can get
additional support from inside the Chapters to help fund this important
event.
* Organisers have gained experience in organising international events
that they can use to host future events. A session on project
management was held and participants who were not key organisers gained
insight into how to run events that they could take back to their own
communities to run events like the one we did on a local level.
* Participants learned about different chapters, how they worked, some
general internal challenges and how this impacts how they function.
This knowledge means participants can more easily understand why some
things appear like they do on mailing lists and how this relates to them
(or doesn't). It will aid in the ability for chapters to work
together.
* A list of reasons why women do not contribute to Wikipedia was created
and actively discussed. The list is valuable because it approaches the
issue from an international perspective that explains some local issues
about resolving the gender gap.
Wikimedia specific outcomes:
* A mailing list will be created for support in English and Spanish
where women can ask for help with harassment they are dealing with on
Wikipedia and offered solutions. A private mailing list where several
people can be on call was selected because the problems would not be
made public and aggravate problems.
* A discussion was launched about investigating the creation of an OTRS women's specific help service.
* Learning/Training materials specific to women will be created and
shared with the community. These materials will make it easier to do
outreach to women's communities.
* The research on women in the movement will be continued to work on,
with a standardised format and a process for determining what gets
included resolved during a session. A committment was made that once
this was completed in English (a goal for the end of September of this
year), it would be translated into Spanish. This research may assist
chapters in recruiting female volunteers, provide benchmarks for
researchers, and giving chapters and the Foundation a very clear idea of
where the movement needs to improve.
* Methodologies were discussed and developed for measuring the impact of
women on Wikimedia related projects that can be used by participants to
conduct future research.
* Translation of materials between languages will be worked on.
Materials created in one place may be very useful to others but people
do not know about them and cannot use them because of the language
issues.
* Some of the discussion will focus on why women should edit Wikipedia
instead of why they do not, as this question allows for pro-active
solutions that sound less demeaning to women and require less capital to
improve things like the technology back end if participants can be
motivated to contribute despite these issues.
* Participants will go back to their local communities and continue the
good work they have already been engaged in. Participants have a
support network they can now more effectively utilize in doing this work
and there is the potential for future projects as a result. Example:
There was a discussion about possibily trying to do something between
Australia and Russia for the 2014 Winter Paralympics.
* A line of reasoning was created to respond to questions of "Why women
only events inside the movement?" that make the need obvious: Most local
WMF events are men only, and when they are not, the one or two women
who registered to attend could easily be asked to leave to make the
event men only. This is almost never the case for women in the
movement. Other arguements and lines of reasoning were also developed.
Broad community outcomes:
* WikiChix wiki will be re-launched as a wikis in general organisational
space. The wiki will be hosted by Wikimedia Australia. Plans are
under way to work on this following the Ibercoop meeting in Santiago,
Chile.
* Efforts will be made to increase work with female in technology groups to help increase women's participation.
* In organising events in the future related to the gender gap and women
in technology in general, Open Space will be seriously considered as a
facilitation method given the general success of it at this event.
If you are interested in seeing the conference in action, some videos
are available at
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Video_from_WikiWomenCamp_2012
. Parts of Sue's presentation are available at
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Audio_from_WikiWomenCamp_2012
. A list of blog posts and media reports for the conference can be
found at
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiWomenCamp/Agenda#Other_publication .
Thanks again to everyone who attended and others who assisted in making this event possible.
Sincerely,
Laura Hale
VP of Wikimedia Australia and (one of the) conference organiser(s)
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