Building New Clubhouses: Bridging Refugee and Migrant Women into Technology Design and Production by Leveraging Assets
While HCI scholars have examined how e-textiles serve to bridge the gender divide, there is little research into refugee, asylum seeker and low socioeconomic migrant women (WRAMs) and e-textiles. This paper presents the results of a series of two community-led participatory design workshops to study...
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Zusammenfassung: | While HCI scholars have examined how e-textiles serve to bridge the gender
divide, there is little research into refugee, asylum seeker and low
socioeconomic migrant women (WRAMs) and e-textiles. This paper presents the
results of a series of two community-led participatory design workshops to
study the factors that enable these women, who face intersecting barriers, to
engage in STEM oriented making activities. Our findings examine A. deficit
discourse and strengths-based narratives, B. bridging STEM skills into a
culturally safe and tailored learning environment, C. bridging commitment
through commercial viability and D. the benefits of organizational partnering
to bridge skills and diverse communities. This paper makes three contributions.
First, we offer a strengths-based counter narrative on the abilities, assets
and motivations of WRAMs to engage in makerspaces, particularly STEM skills.
Second, we offer a discussion on the implications of racial capitalism and
internalized bias which limits resources, research and practice with WRAMs and
consequently, technological design and production. Third, we extend the work of
Buechley and contribute five strategies to bridge WRAMs into STEM oriented
makerspace activities to build a new clubhouse. We discuss the vital role
researchers, technologists, makerspaces and financiers must play in supporting
these new clubhouses to facilitate strengths-based narratives, harnessing and
amplifying skills-based assets, in order to diversify who shapes technology and
thus what is shaped. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.02600 |