Alison E. Adam, Judy Emms, Eileen Green, Jenny Owen (Eds.):
Woman, Work and Computerization: Breaking Old Boundaries - Building New Forms, Proceedings of the IFIP TC9/WG9.1 Fifth International Conference on Woman, Work and Computerization: Breaking Old Boundaries - Building New Forms, Manchester, UK, 2-5 July, 1994.
IFIP Transactions A-57 Elsevier 1994, ISBN 0-444-81927-4
@proceedings{DBLP:conf/ifip9-1/1994,
editor = {Alison E. Adam and
Judy Emms and
Eileen Green and
Jenny Owen},
title = {Woman, Work and Computerization: Breaking Old Boundaries - Building
New Forms, Proceedings of the IFIP TC9/WG9.1 Fifth International
Conference on Woman, Work and Computerization: Breaking Old Boundaries
- Building New Forms, Manchester, UK, 2-5 July, 1994},
booktitle = {Woman, Work and Computerization},
publisher = {Elsevier},
series = {IFIP Transactions},
volume = {A-57},
year = {1994},
isbn = {0-444-81927-4},
bibsource = {DBLP, http://dblp.uni-trier.de}
}
Philosophy and Information Systems
- Lucy A. Suchman:
Suporting Articulation Work: Aspects of a Feminist Practice of Technology Production.
7-21
- Ina Wagner:
Hard Times: The Politics of Women's Work in Computerised Environments.
23-34
- Sarvas Katsikides, Margit Pohl:
Dichotomous Thinking, Women, and Technology.
35-43
- Helena Karasti:
What's Different in Gender Oriented ISD?.
45-58
- Cecile K. M. Crutzen:
The Influence of Feminist Theory On Informatics Course Design.
59-73
- Turid Birkenes, Annita Fjuk:
A Feminist Approach to the Design of Computer Systems Supporting Co-operative Work: The Troublesome Issue of Co-operation seen from a Women's Perspective.
75-89
- Leslie Regan Shade:
Gender Issues in Computer Networking.
91-105
- Marja Vehviläinen:
Living Through the Boundaries of Information Systems Expertise - a Work History of a Finnish Wman Systems Developer.
107-120
- Ursula Holtgrewe:
Everyday Experts? Professionals' Women Assistants and Information Technology.
121-128
- Jeanette Hofmann:
Two Versions of the Same: The Text Editor and the Automatic Letter Writer as Contrasting Conceptions of Digital Writing.
129-142
- Alison E. Adam:
Who knows how? Who knows that? Feminist Epistemology and Artificial Intelligence.
143-156
- Christine Cooper, Karin van Dam:
To be (certain) or not to be (certain): a Feminist Perspective on Artificial Intelligence.
157-169
- Greg Michaelson:
Women and Men in Computer Cartoons from Punch: 1946 to 1982.
171-184
Education and Training
Work,
Flexibility and Restructuring
- Joan Greenbaum:
Windows on the Workplace: The Temporization of Work.
295-309
- Juliet Webster:
Gender and Technology at Work: 15 Years On.
311-324
- Judy Emms:
Developing our own Mentoring Skills.
325-332
- Anne Fothergill:
Telework: Women's Experiences and Utilization of Information Technology in the Home.
333-347
- Frances Grundy:
Women in the Computing Workplace: Some Impressions.
349-363
- Eileen Green:
Gender Perspectives, Office Systems and Organizational Change.
365-377
- Sabine Sonnentag:
Team Leading in Software Development: A Comparison between Women and Men.
379-391
- Susan R. Fisher:
Librarians and Networks: Breaking the Boundaries that Bind Us.
393-407
- Claudia Eckert, Martin Stacey:
CAD Systems and the Division of Labour in Knitwear Design.
409-422
- Gillian Shapiro:
Informal Processes and Women's Careers in Information Technology Management.
423-437
- Karen Gunter:
Women and the Information Revolution: Washed Ashore by the Third Wave.
439-452
Copyright © Mon Nov 30 20:15:04 2009
by Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de)