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Search Results (430)

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31 pages, 2153 KB  
Article
Telework and Occupational Segregation in Europe
by Anja Siegert, Rafael Granell and Francisco G. Morillas-Jurado
Economies 2025, 13(10), 292; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies13100292 - 8 Oct 2025
Abstract
Occupational segregation between men and women and between rural and urban areas is a persistent driver of labor market inequality in Europe. Women and rural workers are often overrepresented in lower-paid and lower-status occupations, reflecting structural barriers to occupational mobility. This paper investigates [...] Read more.
Occupational segregation between men and women and between rural and urban areas is a persistent driver of labor market inequality in Europe. Women and rural workers are often overrepresented in lower-paid and lower-status occupations, reflecting structural barriers to occupational mobility. This paper investigates how occupational segregation varies across gender, space, and telework status and examines the potential of telework to reduce these inequalities. Using microdata from the 2023 European Labor Force Survey, we calculate segregation indices to measure occupational segregation and monetary gains, as well as losses due to segregation. We further analyze the relationship of segregation and telework. We find the highest segregation and economic disadvantages due to segregation for rural men. Female teleworkers are less clustered in feminized roles compared to non-teleworking women, suggesting that remote work can broaden occupational opportunities. Telework shows reduced segregation when primarily working remotely, but not in hybrid settings. Our findings contribute to a better understanding of spatial and gendered labor market disparities. We further identify the potential of telework to promote a more equitable occupational integration across gender and space. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Macroeconomics of the Labour Market)
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29 pages, 6492 KB  
Article
“Not Your Average Fashion Show:” Rethinking Black Queer Women’s Activism in Queer Fashion Shows
by Donnesha Alexandra Blake
Humanities 2025, 14(10), 195; https://doi.org/10.3390/h14100195 - 2 Oct 2025
Viewed by 168
Abstract
In this study, I expand on the Black feminist tradition of rethinking Black women’s activism by examining how Black queer women’s fashion shows challenge traditional definitions and sites of activism. I present BlaQueer Style as an interpretive framework that largely draws on the [...] Read more.
In this study, I expand on the Black feminist tradition of rethinking Black women’s activism by examining how Black queer women’s fashion shows challenge traditional definitions and sites of activism. I present BlaQueer Style as an interpretive framework that largely draws on the wisdom and theories of Black feminism to undercover how these productions and the politics that shape them are not only sites of activism because they challenge the conventions of mainstream cultural institutions, but because they make space for the social and personal transformation of the communities they center. In this analysis of two public LGBTQ+ fashion shows, I argue that intention aside, the Black queer women founders and fashion workers and their practices and performances of centering marginalized communities, using the body to signal and subvert controlling images, and building coalition among these communities, highlight the liberatory potential of their fashion work. In a time when Black queer and trans people are experiencing misrepresentation and other forms of violence globally, BlaQueer Style is what I name the politics that presents a deep commitment to both the aesthetics and the liberation of these communities in Black queer women’s fashion work. Full article
12 pages, 252 KB  
Article
Governance Strategies in a Global Context from a Gender Perspective: Narratives of Migrant Women
by Teresa Terrón-Caro, Rocío Cárdenas-Rodríguez and Fabiola Ortega-de-Mora
Genealogy 2025, 9(4), 103; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9040103 - 1 Oct 2025
Viewed by 219
Abstract
In recent decades, migratory processes have experienced growing feminization, with women accounting for about 50% of international migrations. However, they are not always recognized as social actors with the capacity for agency—that is, as subjects in decision-making, the formulation of proposals, and transformation [...] Read more.
In recent decades, migratory processes have experienced growing feminization, with women accounting for about 50% of international migrations. However, they are not always recognized as social actors with the capacity for agency—that is, as subjects in decision-making, the formulation of proposals, and transformation both in their lives and in those of the societies in which they participate. This article, from a critical and gender perspective, analyzes the narratives of migrant women interviewed in Spain within the framework of two research projects carried out during the period between 2021 and 2023. Through a qualitative analysis of their resistance strategies and demands, a series of comprehensive policy recommendations are proposed, which are aimed at providing theoretical and practical tools that would allow us to move towards more just and equitable societies. Full article
15 pages, 2144 KB  
Article
Optimizing Ethephon Concentrations for Male Plant Feminization and Enhanced Seed Yield in Dioecious Thai Hemp (Cannabis sativa L. cv. RPF3)
by Pheeraphan Thongplew, Jakkrapong Kangsopa, Sutheera Hermhuk, Krittiya Tongkoom, Prakash Bhuyar and Nednapa Insalud
Int. J. Plant Biol. 2025, 16(3), 111; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijpb16030111 - 18 Sep 2025
Viewed by 610
Abstract
Dioecious hemp cultivation faces significant productivity challenges, as approximately 50% of plants (males) produce no seeds whatsoever, functioning exclusively as pollen donors, creating substantial resource inefficiency in commercial production. This study evaluated ethephon (2-chloroethylphosphonic acid) concentrations from 250 to 1000 ppm for inducing [...] Read more.
Dioecious hemp cultivation faces significant productivity challenges, as approximately 50% of plants (males) produce no seeds whatsoever, functioning exclusively as pollen donors, creating substantial resource inefficiency in commercial production. This study evaluated ethephon (2-chloroethylphosphonic acid) concentrations from 250 to 1000 ppm for inducing feminization in male plants of the Thai hemp cultivar RPF3 under controlled greenhouse conditions. Complete morphological sex conversion (100%) was achieved across all tested concentrations, successfully transforming male plants into seed-producing individuals. Male plants exhibited a linear, concentration-dependent increase in seed production (R2 = 0.76–0.91), with the highest concentration (1000 ppm) producing seven-fold more seeds than the lowest effective concentration (250 ppm). Female plants showed optimal yields at intermediate concentrations (500–750 ppm), with a significant decline in yield at 1000 ppm, indicating hormone toxicity. For commercial optimization, concentration selection depends on production objectives. 500 ppm provides optimal cost-effectiveness for mixed dioecious systems, delivering a 2.2-fold increase in total yield, while 1000 ppm maximizes productivity for male-only cultivation systems. Seeds from feminized males remained consistently 62–73% lighter than those from natural females across all treatments, indicating genetic control over seed morphology, despite hormonal sex conversion. This ethephon-based approach preserves the genetic diversity advantages of dioecious systems while doubling land-use efficiency, providing a sustainable intensification strategy for commercial hemp seed production. Full article
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18 pages, 325 KB  
Article
Gender Equality and Sustainable Societies: The Role of Identity Salience, Ideological Beliefs, and Support for Feminism
by Ana Belén Fernández-Torres, Margarita Martí-Ripoll and Josep Gallifa
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(9), 552; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14090552 - 16 Sep 2025
Viewed by 450
Abstract
The pursuit of gender equality and inclusive societies—key goals of the United Nations 2030 Agenda—depends in part on public alignment with feminist movements. This study examines associations between ideological beliefs, gender identity salience, and identification across multiple social categories and support for feminism [...] Read more.
The pursuit of gender equality and inclusive societies—key goals of the United Nations 2030 Agenda—depends in part on public alignment with feminist movements. This study examines associations between ideological beliefs, gender identity salience, and identification across multiple social categories and support for feminism in Spain. Drawing on a nationally representative sample (N = 3928) from the 2024 CIS survey, we assess whether individuals who view gender as their most salient identity report higher support for feminism, and whether progressive ideological orientations—such as left–right political positioning, environmental values, and lower moral conservatism—as well as broader single-axis identifications across social domains, are linked to feminist alignment. Results from descriptive and regression analyses indicate that support for feminism is strongly associated with ideological and environmental values, while gender identity salience shows no independent association once these beliefs are taken into account. Analyses conducted separately for women and men suggest different patterns: among women, feminist support aligns with progressive values and broader identifications; among men, greater gender salience coexists with some marginalized identifications but is not positively linked to feminist alignment. These findings highlight that value-oriented and multi-identity approaches are more effective in fostering feminist engagement than appeals based solely on gender salience. The study outlines implications for inclusive policy, civic education, and cross-sector strategies to advance SDG 5 (Gender Equality) and SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender Knowledges and Cultures of Equalities in Global Contexts)
19 pages, 371 KB  
Article
Digital Literacy, Labor Force Characteristics and the Degree of Adoption of Agricultural Socialized Services: Empirical Evidence from Rural China
by Hong Tang, Zhiyou Liu and Feng Huang
Agriculture 2025, 15(17), 1890; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15171890 - 5 Sep 2025
Viewed by 503
Abstract
Under the strategic goal of agricultural modernization, agricultural socialization services have become an important means of enhancing agricultural efficiency and guaranteeing food security. Based on microdata from 3811 farm households in seven provinces, this paper integrates labor force structural characteristics with digital literacy [...] Read more.
Under the strategic goal of agricultural modernization, agricultural socialization services have become an important means of enhancing agricultural efficiency and guaranteeing food security. Based on microdata from 3811 farm households in seven provinces, this paper integrates labor force structural characteristics with digital literacy to construct a comprehensive analytical framework and empirically examines their effects on the degree of access to agricultural socialized services (DASS) through ordered logit model and moderated effects models. The results show that labor force characteristics significantly affect DASS, and the higher the degree of feminization, aging, and part-time employment, the higher the degree of access to services; digital literacy as a whole significantly improves DASS for farm households and shows heterogeneous moderating effects under different labor force characteristics. Therefore, this paper suggests formulating differentiated socialized service promotion strategies, deepening the digitalization of agricultural services, strengthening the digital technology training of rural laborers in various ways, enhancing DASS, effectively improving the efficiency of agricultural production, and supporting the dual goals of food security and rural revitalization. Full article
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18 pages, 299 KB  
Article
Agroforestry Knowledge and Practices: Strategies of Resistance by Peasant and Quilombola Women in Brazil
by Renata Borges Kempf, Josiane Carine Wedig and Carolina Dos Anjos Borba
Conservation 2025, 5(3), 46; https://doi.org/10.3390/conservation5030046 - 1 Sep 2025
Viewed by 675
Abstract
This article addresses agroforestry knowledge and practices of peasant and quilombola women. It draws from research using ethnographic methods, conducted in two different Brazilian communities: with peasant women in the municipality of Pinhão, Paraná, Brazil, and with quilombola women in the Quilombo Ribeirão [...] Read more.
This article addresses agroforestry knowledge and practices of peasant and quilombola women. It draws from research using ethnographic methods, conducted in two different Brazilian communities: with peasant women in the municipality of Pinhão, Paraná, Brazil, and with quilombola women in the Quilombo Ribeirão Grande-Terra Seca in the municipality of Barra do Turvo, in the Ribeira Valley, São Paulo, Brazil. This investigation demonstrates the connection between the exploitation of nature and the oppression of women, and it identifies counter-practices that value cooperation and mutual care. It highlights the importance of recovering ancestral knowledge and resisting the rupture with nature imposed by colonialism. The conclusion indicates that these agroforestry practices play a crucial role in the lives of women and in their resistance to the monocultural model and the market economy in both communities studied. In both communities, women play a central role in sustaining agroforestry practices as forms of resistance, care, and cultural preservation. In Pinhão, peasant women uphold biodiversity and traditional knowledge through everyday practices like seed exchange and in the Quilombo Ribeirão Grande-Terra Seca, quilombola women link agroforestry to identity, territorial defense, and Black resistance. Full article
17 pages, 314 KB  
Article
The Power of the Bruxa: Resistance, Empowerment and Transreligiosity in the Everyday of Contemporary Pagan Women in Portugal
by Joana Martins
Religions 2025, 16(9), 1119; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16091119 - 28 Aug 2025
Viewed by 872
Abstract
The figure of the witch (bruxa) has been historically and contextually diverse, often shaped by gendered perceptions. With the rise of the feminist movement and Contemporary Paganism, the term ‘witch’ transformed into a powerful symbol of resistance and empowerment for women. [...] Read more.
The figure of the witch (bruxa) has been historically and contextually diverse, often shaped by gendered perceptions. With the rise of the feminist movement and Contemporary Paganism, the term ‘witch’ transformed into a powerful symbol of resistance and empowerment for women. It became a tool for women to challenge social expectations and assert their agency, embodying a subversive stance that promotes personal strength and social critique. Drawing on ethnographic research with Portuguese women who identify as both ‘pagan’ and bruxas, this article explores how embracing this identity is an everyday act of resistance, following the framework of anthropologist James C. Scott. Furthermore, the article argues that this affirmation is also transreligious, as proposed by anthropologists Eugenia Roussou and Anastasios Panagiotopoulos, since it encompasses spiritual, religious, political, and socio-environmental dimensions that intertwine in women’s daily lives and identity formation. Both approaches highlight how women within contemporary pagan circles reinterpret and reshape traditional elements—using spiritual and political processes to confront structural challenges. The term ‘bruxa’ is a form of empowerment and resistance that blurs the boundaries between the spiritual and the political, providing ways to understand and cope with their anxieties, amid ongoing socioenvironmental crises. Full article
14 pages, 1484 KB  
Article
Dietary Soy Isoflavones Promote Feminization and Enhance Growth of Juvenile Japanese Eel (Anguilla japonica)
by Hae Seung Jeong, Seong Don Hwang, Kyoung Mi Won and Ju-ae Hwang
Animals 2025, 15(17), 2513; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15172513 - 26 Aug 2025
Viewed by 762
Abstract
The Japanese eel (Anguilla japonica) is a valuable aquaculture species in East Asia. However, sex differentiation under culture conditions is often male-biased, complicating the production of female broodstock. This study evaluated the effects of dietary soy isoflavone (SI) supplementation on growth [...] Read more.
The Japanese eel (Anguilla japonica) is a valuable aquaculture species in East Asia. However, sex differentiation under culture conditions is often male-biased, complicating the production of female broodstock. This study evaluated the effects of dietary soy isoflavone (SI) supplementation on growth performance, sex differentiation, and sex-specific gene expression in juvenile eels. Juvenile eels (initial mean weight: 1.25 ± 0.02 g) were randomly assigned to 15 tanks, each containing 100 g eels, in a 30-week feeding trial. The control diet (SI0) contained 75% jack mackerel meal. The graded levels (2.5, 5, 7.5, and 10%) of α-Starch were included at the expense of SI, referred to as SI0, SI2.5, SI5, SI7.5, and SI10 diets, respectively. Fish were hand-fed to satiation in triplicate groups of each diet, twice daily for 30 weeks. The SI2.5 and SI5 groups exhibited significantly enhanced final weights and specific growth rates compared to those in the control group (SI0). Histological analysis revealed the presence of differentiating gonads with oogonial proliferation and previtellogenesis in the SI-treated groups, particularly at the 2.5% and 5% inclusion levels. Additionally, the expression of key female-related genes (vasa, cyp19a1a, foxl2a, zp3, and zar1) was significantly upregulated in these groups. In contrast, relatively high SI levels (7.5% and 10%) did not provide any further benefits. These results suggest that low-dose supplementation of dietary SI can enhance feminization and promote growth in juvenile eels, thus offering a potential natural alternative to synthetic hormone treatment for broodstock development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sex Determination and Differentiation in Aquatic Animals)
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13 pages, 251 KB  
Article
Sex and the Single Girl and Boy: Eliza Sharples, Richard Carlile, and Radical Reproduction 1831–1833
by Gail Turley Houston
Literature 2025, 5(3), 22; https://doi.org/10.3390/literature5030022 - 19 Aug 2025
Viewed by 358025
Abstract
This case study examines the reproductive choices of republican couple Eliza Sharples (1803–1852) and Richard Carlile (1790–1843) and the conflicted political and personal trajectories of those choices. This includes examination of his initial public writings supporting birth control methods set next to his [...] Read more.
This case study examines the reproductive choices of republican couple Eliza Sharples (1803–1852) and Richard Carlile (1790–1843) and the conflicted political and personal trajectories of those choices. This includes examination of his initial public writings supporting birth control methods set next to his retrogressive attitudes about women’s roles and his increasingly conservative and patriarchal attitudes about sexuality while using Sharples’s pregnancy out of wedlock to make his case for “moral marriage.” It sets his ideas next to Sharples’s proto-feminist uses of her pregnancy (confinement) vis-à-vis his confinement in jail as she seeks to show how her “confinement” does “labor” for republican and feminist causes. The paper highlights a crisis when the jail rescinded Sharples’s right to visit Carlile and studies the rhetoric used in the heated, desperate, triangulated exchanges between the jailors, Carlile and Sharples. Full article
19 pages, 426 KB  
Article
Gendered Dimensions of Poverty in Indonesia: A Study of Financial Inclusion and the Influence of Female-Headed Households
by Retno Agustina Ekaputri, Ketut Sukiyono, Yefriza Yefriza, Ratu Eva Febriani and Ririn Nopiah
Economies 2025, 13(8), 240; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies13080240 - 16 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1510
Abstract
This study examines the feminization of poverty in Indonesia, focusing on the distinct vulnerabilities faced by female-headed households. Utilizing data from the 2023 National Socio-Economic Survey (SUSENAS) involving 291,231 households, this study applies a logistic regression model to investigate gender-specific determinants of household [...] Read more.
This study examines the feminization of poverty in Indonesia, focusing on the distinct vulnerabilities faced by female-headed households. Utilizing data from the 2023 National Socio-Economic Survey (SUSENAS) involving 291,231 households, this study applies a logistic regression model to investigate gender-specific determinants of household poverty. This research finds that education, digital literacy, financial inclusion, and the employment sector are significant factors influencing poverty status, with female-headed households facing disproportionately higher risks. These gaps are mainly attributed to systemic barriers in financial access, digital literacy gaps, and limited labor market opportunities for women. This study emphasizes the importance of implementing gender-responsive policy measures, including targeted education, enhanced digital literacy training, and inclusive financial programs. By presenting empirical evidence from Indonesia, this study contributes to the discourse on gender and poverty, offering actionable insights for the development of inclusive poverty alleviation strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Labour and Education)
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14 pages, 229 KB  
Article
Exploring Silence, Secrecy, and Coded Language: Ethnographic Encounters with Cisgender Women and Trans Women Involved in Sex Work in Kolkata, India
by Sunny Sinha and Satarupa Dasgupta
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(8), 486; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14080486 - 7 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1272
Abstract
Gender-neutral terms such as “sex work” and “sex worker” have gained prominence in academic, activist, and policy discourses. Unlike terms such as ‘prostitutes’ and ‘prostitution,’ these terms serve to reduce stigma and emphasize the labor involved in sex work. However, numerous studies suggest [...] Read more.
Gender-neutral terms such as “sex work” and “sex worker” have gained prominence in academic, activist, and policy discourses. Unlike terms such as ‘prostitutes’ and ‘prostitution,’ these terms serve to reduce stigma and emphasize the labor involved in sex work. However, numerous studies suggest that these terms carry different meanings across cultural contexts, and their impact is experienced differently by various sub-groups of sex workers. Although originally coined by American activist Carol Leigh to unify sex workers across genders and sectors, these terms are, in some settings—including Kolkata, India—met with silence, coded language, or secrecy, particularly among transient sex workers, including cisgender and transgender women. As researchers with two decades of ethnographic research with 46 cisgender and 37 transgender women engaged in sex work in Kolkata and Eastern India, the authors argue that such silence and non-verbal forms of communication should not be interpreted merely as ignorance or disengagement but rather as strategic/willful acts of agency or resistance. These practices enable sex workers situated in different contexts to navigate unequal power dynamics within NGOs, manage respectability, mitigate structural violence, and foster communal identity. By examining how diverse groups of sex workers employ silence and secrecy, this study contributes to a more nuanced and empathetic understanding of the complexities surrounding the former’s lives and their agency. The study results indicate that it is essential for scholars, advocates and activists to employ strengths-based, context-specific language and research practices to be able to hear the stories of subaltern groups like commercial sex workers. It is also suggested that training of service providers and helping professionals focus on accepting and honoring the language people use to identify themselves in varied spaces and contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gender Studies)
13 pages, 3991 KB  
Communication
Feminization of the Blood–Brain Barrier Changes the Brain Transcriptome of Drosophila melanogaster Males
by Danyel S. Davis, Warda Hashem, Chamala Lama, Joseph L. Reeve and Brigitte Dauwalder
Curr. Issues Mol. Biol. 2025, 47(8), 626; https://doi.org/10.3390/cimb47080626 - 6 Aug 2025
Viewed by 641
Abstract
Beyond its crucial role as a tight barrier to protect the nervous system, the Blood–Brain Barrier (BBB) is increasingly being recognized for its physiological processes that affect brain function and behavior. In Drosophila melanogaster, the BBB expresses sex-specific transcripts, and a change [...] Read more.
Beyond its crucial role as a tight barrier to protect the nervous system, the Blood–Brain Barrier (BBB) is increasingly being recognized for its physiological processes that affect brain function and behavior. In Drosophila melanogaster, the BBB expresses sex-specific transcripts, and a change in the sexual identity of adult BBB cells results in a significant reduction in male courtship behavior. The molecular nature of this BBB/brain interaction and the molecules that mediate it are unknown. Here we feminize BBB cells by targeted expression of the Drosophila female-specific master regulator TraF in otherwise normal males. We examined the effect on RNA expression in dissected brains by RNA sequencing. We find that 283 transcripts change in comparison to normal control males. Transcripts representing cell signaling processes and synaptic communication are enriched, as are hormonal mediators. These transcripts provide a valuable resource for addressing questions about BBB and brain interaction. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biochemistry, Molecular and Cellular Biology)
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19 pages, 408 KB  
Article
Gender Leadership Imbalance in Academia: An Etiological Approach
by Maria Krambia Kapardis, Petroula Mavrikiou and Loizos Symeou
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(8), 477; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14080477 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 751
Abstract
Whilst there has been an increasing trend of women holding academic positions in European Higher Tertiary Institutions (HTIs), leadership positions are held predominantly by men. The study draws on radical feminism theory with which its methodology is aligned by investigating the perceptions of [...] Read more.
Whilst there has been an increasing trend of women holding academic positions in European Higher Tertiary Institutions (HTIs), leadership positions are held predominantly by men. The study draws on radical feminism theory with which its methodology is aligned by investigating the perceptions of both genders. To that end, the study categorizes the impediments holding women back from breaking the glass ceiling into endogenous and exogenous factors. By doing so, the authors are in a better position to recommend the implementation of policies and procedures to address this inequality and navigate towards achieving sustainable gender equality. The research was conducted using an online survey questionnaire administered among all academic and administrative staff of universities in the Republic of Cyprus, the country with the highest glass ceiling in the EU. The authors found that the binary genders differ in their perceptions of what keeps women from breaking the glass ceiling and that this is attributable to exogenous factors, namely, (a) the walls created by male leaders, reinforcing a feeling of marginalization and mansplaining; and (b) family obligations enhancing women’s experiencing a lack of time and burnout. Furthermore, the exogenous factors and the extremely gendered higher echelons of HTIs underpin the endogenous factor of self-sabotage, making women feel they would rather avoid the toxic leadership environment with its lack of professional credit, a view supported by radical feminism theory. The authors suggest practical policy implications to rectify the gender imbalance in leadership in HTIs and suggest directions for future research. Full article
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48 pages, 2275 KB  
Article
Intersectional Software Engineering as a Field
by Alicia Julia Wilson Takaoka, Claudia Maria Cutrupi and Letizia Jaccheri
Software 2025, 4(3), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/software4030018 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 882
Abstract
Intersectionality is a concept used to explain the power dynamics and inequalities that some groups experience owing to the interconnection of social differences such as in gender, sexual identity, poverty status, race, geographic location, disability, and education. The relation between software engineering, feminism, [...] Read more.
Intersectionality is a concept used to explain the power dynamics and inequalities that some groups experience owing to the interconnection of social differences such as in gender, sexual identity, poverty status, race, geographic location, disability, and education. The relation between software engineering, feminism, and intersectionality has been addressed by some studies thus far, but it has never been codified before. In this paper, we employ the commonly used ABC Framework for empirical software engineering to show the contributions of intersectional software engineering (ISE) as a field of software engineering. In addition, we highlight the power dynamic, unique to ISE studies, and define gender-forward intersectionality as a way to use gender as a starting point to identify and examine inequalities and discrimination. We show that ISE is a field of study in software engineering that uses gender-forward intersectionality to produce knowledge about power dynamics in software engineering in its specific domains and environments. Employing empirical software engineering research strategies, we explain the importance of recognizing and evaluating ISE through four dimensions of dynamics, which are people, processes, products, and policies. Beginning with a set of 10 seminal papers that enable us to define the initial concepts and the query for the systematic mapping study, we conduct a systematic mapping study leads to a dataset of 140 primary papers, of which 15 are chosen as example papers. We apply the principles of ISE to these example papers to show how the field functions. Finally, we conclude the paper by advocating the recognition of ISE as a specialized field of study in software engineering. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Women’s Special Issue Series: Software)
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