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Dreaming the Future: The Gendered Technopolitics of Development

机译:梦想未来:发展的性别技术政治

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The new mantra of development discourse in the struggle against inequality depicts women as users, producers, consumers, and designers of technologies. Despite a large body of research on use, access, and infrastructure, scholars have paid less attention to the ways in which transnational discourses and local activism around gender and digital technologies (hardware, software, mobiles, internet) intersect in the global south. This dissertation explores the gendered technopolitics of development through examining first, how discourse---produced by the United Nations and the World Bank---constructs gender and technology, and second, how activists train, advocate, and mobilize around issues of gender and technology in Latin America and other regions of the global south. I argue that these official discourses frame "third world" women as ideal agents of technological progress by mobilizing digital technologies in ways that commodify gendered forms of intimacy. Simultaneously, activists in Latin America and other parts of the global south are reimagining the information society and the place of women within it, even while working within development logics.;The main research questions of my investigation are: 1) In what ways are gender, development, and the uses of technology being framed by development institutions and by contrast how are these being understood by activists on-the-ground? 2) What are the origins, trajectories, and consequences of these different frames? My dissertation makes a theoretical contribution to critical sociology of development, specifically to gender and development, by: 1) expanding debates on appropriation and depolitization through the study of both macro-institutional discourse and women's organizational micro-politics 2) examining digital technologies as a central locus of gender, development, and power 3) and explicitly theorizing violence (in this case online) as inherent to the network society.;I build on interdisciplinary theories of neoliberalism, feminist theories of intimacy and globalization, and postcolonial and decolonial thought to examine the tactics of discipline as well as the modes of contestation in the making of what I call the third world technological woman, created through discourses on access, dexterity, and expertise of digital technologies, and gendered tropes of care, nurturance, intuition, and creativity. By bringing these literatures into conversation, my research reveals the tensions and possibilities between macro-institutional development discourses and micro-level organizational politics.;My investigation is a comparative case study of the transnational network Women's Rights Programme of the Association of Progressive Communications (APC-WRP), the cooperative Sula Batsu (Costa Rica) and the non-governmental organization Colnodo (Colombia). It draws from 62 in-depth interviews with activists from the region, specialists in gender and technology, and development and government officials, observations of global, regional, and local events, and textual analysis of United Nations and World Bank reports on gender and technology.;I reveal the problems in centering an entrepreneurial woman as the technological heroine of the network society, as well as the possibilities for social transformation. I found that development discourse on gender and technology frames "third world" women as ideal agents of technological progress by appropriating feminist concepts and gendered tropes, while also mobilizing digital technologies in ways that commodify intimate relationships. This discourse reproduces neoliberal rhetoric that privileges market competitiveness, socioeconomic development, and individual empowerment, and undermines collective modes of relating to technology. The reports also extend market-oriented rationalities into intimate areas of life, making technology seem indispensable to numerous forms of wellbeing and success. Gendered qualities such as care, selflessness, intuition and creativity, are intrinsic to responsibility, discipline, rationality, and self-management. Digital technologies are ideally suited for this endeavor: they can be connected to numerous areas of life and work, from the most intimate to the most public. By contrast, technology activists employ forms of affect and principles of horizontality, prefigurative politics, economic justice, and solidarity, as well as an emphasis on "third world" women's sexuality and pleasure through digital technologies that question official development frameworks. Also, online violence problematizes teleological plans for the entrepreneurial technological woman..;My research advances numerous possibilities for understanding and theorizing feminist technopolitics---concerned with race, sexuality, gender, class, and the environment---in the developing world when the stakes are high for both economic development and feminist and social justice politics, more so in times of increasing inequality and technological ubiquity. Incorporating the study of the "intimate" broadens simplistic and flat portrayals of the communities we study. At the same time, examining intimacy provides a ground to explore how institutions attempt to shape subjectivities for specific agendas. My research also demonstrates that social justice activists reimagine their politics and practices in light of new and increasing forms of appropriation and cooptation. Finally, violence---ranging from the interpersonal to the structural, including racism, misogyny, heteronormativity, ecological devastation, poverty---is constitutive, and not a consequence or a by-product of the information society.
机译:在与不平等作斗争中发展话语的新口号将妇女描绘为技术的使用者,生产者,消费者和设计者。尽管在使用,访问和基础设施方面进行了大量研究,但学者们很少关注跨国对话和围绕性别和数字技术(硬件,软件,手机,互联网)的地方行动在全球南方相交的方式。本论文首先探讨以下方面,探讨发展的性别技术政治:联合国和世界银行的话语如何构成性别和技术;其次,激进分子如何围绕性别和性别问题进行培训,倡导和动员。技术在拉丁美洲和全球其他南部地区。我认为,这些官方话语通过动员数字技术来适应性别上的亲密关系,从而将“第三世界”妇女视为技术进步的理想推动者。同时,拉丁美洲和全球南方其他地区的激进主义者正在重新构想信息社会以及其中的妇女地位,即使在发展逻辑内工作也是如此。;我研究的主要研究问题是:1)性别以何种方式开发机构确定了技术的发展,发展以及技术的使用,相比之下,活动家如何理解这些? 2)这些不同框架的起源,轨迹和后果是什么?我的论文对以下方面的发展做出了重要的理论贡献,特别是对性别与发展的批判性社会学:1)通过研究宏观制度话语和妇女的组织微观政治,扩大关于拨款和去政治化的辩论2)将数字技术作为一种性别,发展和权力的中心所在)3)明确将暴力(在这种情况下为在线)理论化为网络社会的固有特征;我建立在新自由主义的跨学科理论,亲密关系和全球化的女权主义理论以及后殖民主义和非殖民主义思想的基础上考察通过我对数字技术的获取,灵巧性和专业知识以及对照护,养育,直觉和性别的性别取向的论述而创建的我称之为第三世界技术女性的过程中的纪律策略和竞赛模式。创造力。通过将这些文献进行讨论,我的研究揭示了宏观制度发展话语与微观组织政治之间的紧张关系和可能性。我的研究是对渐进传播协会(APC)跨国网络妇女权利计划的比较案例研究。 -WRP),合作社苏拉巴苏(哥斯达黎加)和非政府组织科尔诺多(哥伦比亚)。它取材于对该地区的活动家,性别与技术专家,发展与政府官员的62次深度访谈,对全球,区域和地方事件的观察以及对联合国和世界银行关于性别与技术报告的文本分析我揭示了以企业家女性为中心的网络社会中的技术英雄的问题,以及社会转型的可能性。我发现,有关性别和技术的发展论述通过运用女权主义概念和性别对立词,将“第三世界”妇女构筑为技术进步的理想推动者,同时还通过调动亲密关系的方式动员了数字技术。这种话语再现了新自由主义的言论,这种言论享有市场竞争优势,社会经济发展和个人赋权的特权,并破坏了与技术有关的集体模式。这些报告还将面向市场的理性延伸到了生活的私密领域,使得技术似乎对于许多形式的幸福和成功都是必不可少的。关心,无私,直觉和创造力等性别特质是责任,纪律,理性和自我管理的内在本质。数字技术非常适合此工作:它们可以连接到生活和工作的各个领域,从最私密的地方到最公开的地方。相比之下,技术活动家则通过影响官方发展框架的数字技术,运用了各种形式的影响力和原则,水平主义,象征性政治,经济正义和团结,并强调了“第三世界”妇女的性与享乐性。此外,在线暴力使企业家技术女性的目的论计划问题化..;我的研究为理解和理论化女权主义技术政治学(涉及种族,性,性别,阶级和环境)提供了多种可能性,在发展中国家对于经济发展以及女权主义和社会正义政治都至关重要,在不平等和技术普及率不断提高的时期更是如此。结合“亲密”的研究,拓宽了我们所研究社区的简单化和扁平化描述。同时,检查亲密关系为探索机构如何试图塑造特定议程的主观性提供了基础。我的研究还表明,社会正义活动家根据新的和不断增加的拨款和合作形式重新构想其政治和实践。最后,暴力是构成性的,而不是信息社会的结果或副产品,从人际关系到结构性暴力,包括种族主义,厌女症,异性主义,生态破坏,贫穷等。

著录项

  • 作者

    Shokooh Valle, Firuzeh.;

  • 作者单位

    Northeastern University.;

  • 授予单位 Northeastern University.;
  • 学科 Sociology.;Gender studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 231 p.
  • 总页数 231
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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