Comparative analysis and feminist redesign
Identify 2-3 organizations or projects that address the same problem differently.
| Dimension | Original Initiative | Alternative 1 | Alternative 2 | Alternative 3 (optional) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Who controls the data? | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Who benefits? | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| How is consent achieved? | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Who funds the project? | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Data collection methods | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Accountability mechanisms | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| [Add your own dimension] | -- | -- | -- | -- |
Select the counter-data project you found most compelling or complete. Analyze it using data feminist principles.
Project Name: [Name of alternative project]
Organization: [Organization name]
Brief Description: Summarize what this project does and how it differs from the original initiative.
How does this project challenge or redistribute power? Who gains power? Who might lose it?
What power structures does this project challenge? How?
How does this project incorporate lived experience, emotion, or embodied knowledge?
How does this project move beyond binary categories or challenge hierarchical structures?
How does this project incorporate multiple perspectives, methods, or ways of knowing?
How does this project account for context, history, and local knowledge?
How does this project acknowledge and value the labor involved in data work?
Based on your analysis, propose a redesign of the original data initiative or algorithm.
Provide a brief overview of your redesigned system. What are the core changes you're proposing?
For Data Initiative: Describe your redesigned data collection, analysis, and use methodology.
For Algorithm: Create a new logic flowchart showing how your redesigned algorithm would work.
Figure: Visual representation of the redesigned system
Identify what data or features you would refuse to collect or build.
Examine how refusal can be a feminist practice. How does saying "no" to certain data or features protect communities and challenge power structures?
How would you prevent or address harm in your redesigned system?
What: Description of the accountability mechanism
How: How it would be implemented
Who: Who would be responsible
What: Description of the accountability mechanism
How: How it would be implemented
Who: Who would be responsible
What: Description of the accountability mechanism
How: How it would be implemented
Who: Who would be responsible
Visualize who gains or loses power in your redesign.
Figure: Stakeholder map showing power shifts in the redesigned system
Identify the limitations and vulnerabilities of your redesign. Be honest about what your proposal cannot solve.
At least 12 sources total (including those from previous parts)