Hello wikimedians!
The annual report of Whose Knowledge? is available on Meta: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Whose_Knowledge%3F/Reports/2023
Here is a short and sweet summary of what you will find in our report:
- The 6th edition of our #VisibleWikiWomen campaign, *#BodyPlurality #CuerposPlurales #CorposPlurais: Celebrating the full uniqueness of our plural body sizes, shapes and identities online*, surpassed our goal, with +3000 images shared on Commons. - We convened our partners and friends both virtually and in person for insightful conversations and learnings on decolonizing structured data and re-thinking the public domain, including at Wikimania 2013. - In celebration of the International Mother Language Day, we published our International Sign (IS) translation of the State of the Internet's Languages (STIL) summary report and started two research-in-action processes to look at critical language justice issues online. - We also joined many global and regional gatherings and conferences where we held workshops, panels and reconnected/joined/supported our communities at Wikimania, GLAM Wiki Conference, RightsCon, among others. - We continue to document our stories and those of our communities in multimodal ways from our Whose Voices? podcast which features interviews of our 2022 “Decolonizing the Internet East Africa” convening; to our blog, social media channels and monthly newsletter.
Explore the full report for further details and to explore our thematic reports and multimedia resources.
Keep updated via our website (https://whoseknowledge.org/), our social media channels (@whoseknowledge on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook), and consider subscribing to our newsletter (https://whoseknowledge.org/join/). You can also connect with us on our Meta discussion page ( https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Whose_Knowledge%3F).
In solidarity,
Mariana, Sunshine and the Whose Knowledge? team
wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org