Technology assessment : a feminist perspective

Bibliographic Information

Technology assessment : a feminist perspective

Janine Marie Morgall

(Labor and social change)

Temple University Press, 1993

  • : pbk

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9781566390903

Description

How well does technology assessment (TA) relate to women's lives? If women are underrepresented in the long-term research and development process that leads to scientific advancements, how can TA understand technology aimed at women? It can't, claims the author of "Technology Assessment: A Feminist Perspective". A relative new field, TA examines the social aspect of technology and provides information critical to decision making, policy development, safety standards, and avoiding litigation. Until gender analysis is introduced into all assessments of new technologies, Janine Marie Morgall argues, TA can't evaluate technology's impact upon women. Morgall investigates two areas of technology that affect women's lives: productive (clerical work) and reproductive (health care). Case studies of clerical workers and health care recipients illustrate gender-specify effects of technology ranging from word processors to treatments for infertility. These studies convincingly demonstrate that TA encourages innovations without questioning their effects on women. Issues of dominance, control, and conflicting values emerge from Morgall's feminist perspective and support her call for gender analysis of new technologies. Janine Marie Morgall is Assistant Professor at the Institute for Social Pharmacy in Copenhagen. She has worked as a consultant for the World Health Organization, specializing in women's health issues and appropriate health care technology.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction: On the Importance of Gender Analysis Part I: Technology Assessment 1. Evolution 2. Organization 3. Methods and Their Limitations 4. Problems Perceived by Proponents Part II: Women and Technology 5. A Feminist Perspective on Technology 6. A Feminist Approach to Assessment Part III: Women and Technology: Examples 7. The Clerical Sector 8. Reproductive Technology Conclusion: Drawing Out Criteria for a Critical Feminist Approach Notes Bibliography Index
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9781566390910

Description

How well does technology assessment (TA) relate to women's lives? If women are underrepresented in the long-term research and development process that leads to scientific advancements, how can TA understand technology aimed at women? It can't, claims the author of "Technology Assessment: A Feminist Perspective". A relative new field, TA examines the social aspect of technology and provides information critical to decision making, policy development, safety standards, and avoiding litigation. Until gender analysis is introduced into all assessments of new technologies, Janine Marie Morgall argues, TA can't evaluate technology's impact upon women. Morgall investigates two areas of technology that affect women's lives: productive (clerical work) and reproductive (health care). Case studies of clerical workers and health care recipients illustrate gender-specify effects of technology ranging from word processors to treatments for infertility. These studies convincingly demonstrate that TA encourages innovations without questioning their effects on women. Issues of dominance, control, and conflicting values emerge from Morgall's feminist perspective and support her call for gender analysis of new technologies. Janine Marie Morgall is Assistant Professor at the Institute for Social Pharmacy in Copenhagen. She has worked as a consultant for the World Health Organization, specializing in women's health issues and appropriate health care technology.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction: On the Importance of Gender Analysis Part I: Technology Assessment 1. Evolution 2. Organization 3. Methods and Their Limitations 4. Problems Perceived by Proponents Part II: Women and Technology 5. A Feminist Perspective on Technology 6. A Feminist Approach to Assessment Part III: Women and Technology: Examples 7. The Clerical Sector 8. Reproductive Technology Conclusion: Drawing Out Criteria for a Critical Feminist Approach Notes Bibliography Index

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