This is a huge threat not only to gender equality, but to all of our prosperity, opportunity and wellbeing.
A monthly series from the Web Foundation
View ([link removed]) this email in your browser ([link removed])
[link removed]
[link removed]
** The digital gender gap is not a women's problem.
It's everyone's problem.
Click to tweet ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
In this edition, we untangle the global digital gender divide that keeps hundreds of millions of women and girls on the sidelines of our online world and outline how governments and companies can promote inclusion.
The internet has broken down barriers for millions previously held back by their geography, wealth, race, class and gender.
But for all our progress, many of the inequalities we find offline are replicated online, limiting the internet’s egalitarian potential. Globally men are still 21% more likely to be online than women ([link removed]) — rising to 52% in the world’s least developed countries.
And digital gender inequality is not just about access. Gaps in digital skills and quality of connectivity, and online violence that disproportionately impacts the safety and rights of women and girls leave us with a web that does not work equally well for men and women ([link removed]) .
This is a huge threat not only to gender equality, but to all of our prosperity, opportunity and wellbeing.
If we don’t take action now to close this digital gender gap, we’re only reading half the book ([link removed]) . We will miss out the talents, ideas and experiences of women and girls across the globe. Read our latest report ([link removed]) to learn more about how we can make sure women and girls are able to participate fully online.
Chenai Chair
Research Manager, Gender and Digital Rights
@chenaichair ([link removed])
Digital gender inequality, in numbers
48% — 48% of women around the world use the internet, compared to 58% of men (ITU ([link removed]) ).
17% — In Colombia, we found a 17% gender gap in meaningful connectivity ([link removed]) . This was driven by men having more frequent access to the internet and faster connections (Web Foundation ([link removed]) ).
1 in 5 — 1 in 5 girls (19%) have left or significantly reduced use of a social media platform after being harassed (Plan International ([link removed]) ).
48% — 48% of women in Colombia, Ghana, Indonesia and Uganda who don’t use the internet said this is because they don’t know how (Web Foundation ([link removed]) ).
13 — Women and girls are 13 times less likely than men to file for a technology patent (EQUALS Global Partnership ([link removed]) )
Less than 35% — On average, women constitute less than 35% of ICT and related professions (EQUALS Global Partnership ([link removed]) )
29% — In Colombia, Ghana, Indonesia and Uganda, men were 29% more likely to post about social or economic issues than women and 29% more likely to sell products and services online (Web Foundation ([link removed]) ).
[link removed]
“The dream is that the web is a space where everyone’s opinion counts, where everyone matters, where everyone can be their full self. Can we consider the web to be an empowering space where people can actively participate and raise their concerns if the groups who are typically silenced in the offline space are also silenced online?”
Chenai Chair, Web Foundation Research Manager for Gender and Digital Rights ([link removed])
** Resources to explore
------------------------------------------------------------
🌐 Even where women are closing the gap on basic internet access, they face additional barriers to using the internet and fully participating online. Our new report provides a snapshot of digital gender inequality ([link removed]) across four countries in three regions.
📱 Despite some progress, there remains a substantial mobile gender gap across low- and middle-income countries. GSMA found that women are less likely than men to both own a mobile phone ([link removed]) and to access the internet on a mobile device.
🛑 The Covid-19 crisis has sparked a shadow pandemic: an escalation of gender-based violence, both offline and online. Glitch found that nearly 1 in 2 women and non binary people have experienced online abuse since the beginning of the pandemic ([link removed]) .
🌍 Online harassment and abuse fundamentally affects how women navigate and use the internet. Pollicy examines the online lived experiences of women ([link removed]) in five countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
❌ This abuse and harassment is driving girls across the globe off Facebook, Instagram and Twitter ([link removed]) , according to the Plan International’s global survey on online violence.
🖥 STEM industries fall dramatically short in gender parity. The EQUALS Global Partnership examines what action is needed to make sure women and girls can become users, shapers and creators of digital technology ([link removed]) and the role education plays in closing the digital skills gender gap ([link removed]) .
Governments and companies must get serious about closing the digital gender gap & promoting more inclusive societies
Our 2020 Women’s Rights Online report calls for action ([link removed]) to make sure women and girls can access the full benefits of digital technology. We’re urging governments and companies to take the following steps ([link removed]) :
1️⃣ Make a public commitment that they are working towards closing the gender digital divide and protecting women’s rights online.
2️⃣ Collect (and then use!) data on how women use ICTs, to inform digital policymaking.
3️⃣ Prioritise meaningful connectivity ([link removed]) for women — setting ambitious targets that ensure women have the devices, speeds, data and regular access they need to fully benefit from internet access.
4️⃣ Promote digital skills and ICT education to encourage women and girls to use the internet, create content online and navigate the online world safely.
5️⃣ Safeguard the online privacy of women and girls — which in turn makes the web safer for women, and for everyone.
Read the report to learn more. ([link removed])
[link removed]
We're on Instagram!
Follow along: [link removed] ([link removed])
Enjoying this newsletter? Share it with a friend! They can sign up here ([link removed]) .
Donate ([link removed]) to help us build a better web.
============================================================
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Instagram ([link removed])
** LinkedIn ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
World Wide Web Foundation, ** CC BY 4.0 ([link removed])
2020
Our mailing address is:
World Wide Web Foundation
1110 Vermont Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. xxxxxx
** U ([link removed])
** pdate your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])