“you can’t be what you can’t see”

Went to a documentary screening at the AAUW convention last night. The film was “Miss Representation” and was a pretty high-budget, two-hour movie about women’s portrayal (or lack thereof) in the media. Lots of amazing, A-list celebrities featured: journalists like Katie Couric and Laura Ling, politicians like Condoleeza Rice, actresses Geena Davis and Rosario Dawson, and some badass feminist super heroes (Jean Kilbourne, Jackson Katz, Gigi Durham, Gloria Steinem, etc.). Also included tons of recent, relevant clips from film and TV. The documentary’s message was undeniable and went into detail about women’s symbolic annihilation on-screen (with important stats to back everything up).

Would definitely be interested in trying to schedule a screening at UNC for the fall semester–the documentary is perfect for “non-experts” and people who don’t have much academic background in feminist theory (i.e. most of the university community!). The only struggle, as always, is getting those folks in the room.

Headed to Adams Morgan afterward to have Ethiopian food for the first time at Meskerem–so good! We got a sampler bowl, and there wasn’t anything I didn’t like. And the honey wine was delicious!


first internship blog post!

I attended a book talk on Tuesday, June 14 with a bunch of fellow interns & a few staff members and wrote a blog summarizing the author’s main points. Here’s the link to the first blog post I’ve written for my internship. The text is below:

Author Finds Technology a Tool Not a Solution in Bridging Divide

People often describe the “digital divide” in terms of high-income individuals’ having access to cutting-edge technology that helps them thrive socially and economically, while low-income individuals are left out. The divide is often cited as a significant source of economic inequality.

At a recent event at Busboys and Poets, Dr. Virginia Eubanks, author of Digital Dead End: Fighting for Social Justice in the Information Age, critiqued this diagnosis as overly simplistic. The event was co-sponsored by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research, Teaching for Change, and DC Jobs with Justice.

Eubanks worked with a group of low-income women who are members of the YWCA community in Troy, NY, and asked the women what they needed. The main problem was not the digital divide. Instead, “more buses, less racism, and fairer employment” were the most popular calls for help.

Eubanks expected these women to have few technological skills. Instead, she found two-thirds of them already working in high-tech jobs, such as data entry or network administration. However, these jobs were low-paying, had few benefits, and were unstable. Technology was ubiquitous in their lives, but they could not use it to improve those lives.

Eubanks realized that simply providing technology and training is not enough to improve women’s lives. Rather, projects need to be designed to account for deeply ingrained racial and gender oppression.

Eubanks, informed by the belief that those closest to problems can best find solutions, worked closely with the women to identify their needs. They created a community technology lab for the YWCA, staffed and sustained by residents, as well as what Eubanks called an “Angie’s List for social services providers,” where the women could provide feedback on their experiences at local assistance agencies.

Even so, access to tech tools was not a high priority for the women. They were more concerned with the basic structural and cultural challenges that affected them on a daily basis—a lack of reliable transportation and workplace flexibility, coupled with racist attitudes.

Eubanks emphasized that technology in itself cannot cure these problems, but it can play a positive role. “We all have a stake in the creation of a more just information age,” she said.

Eubanks noted the creation of new, high-end jobs in technological development—touted by politicians including President Obama as the solution to our country’s economic woes—requires the support of more service industry positions in food service, hospitality, and retail. These lower-income jobs must be fair, provide benefits, and allow for work-life balance to meet the needs of workers.

IWPR has identified other basic benefits that can drastically improve the quality of workers’ lives in the shorter term. For women and their families, guaranteed paid maternity leave (the U.S. is one of only five countries worldwide that doesn’t require employers to provide it) and paid sick days could improve health, well-being, and economic stability.

Pay equity is another problem Eubanks identified. The women would often accept minimal compensation for high-tech jobs, hoping to gain the skills necessary for a higher-paid position. In a society where open discussion of salary is often taboo, these women had little opportunity to identify and express grievances, and only rarely advanced in the workplace.

“Technology is not a destination, it’s another site for struggle,” said Eubanks. In making technological advancements we should consider the quality of life of the workers who perform and enable it. Technology can contribute to a more just society, as long as the privileged consciously use it as a tool to support social justice, and not a ready-made engine of social progress.

Leah Josephson is the Communications Intern at the Institute for Women’s Policy Research.


internship strategy: keep track of your accomplishments

I’ve decided to start maintaining a detailed Google document that will keep track of all of the tasks I’ve completed at my internship so I can refer to it later when preparing for interviews or updating my resume.

I think it could be easy to forget some of my accomplishments because my position in the communications department, a more administrative role at my organization, doesn’t come with one particular project to complete throughout the summer, so I’ve been helping with a lot of different things in writing and editing, web maintenance, social media and communications outreach.

Just thought I’d share; think this could be a helpful strategy for interns!


much-needed outlet!

I’m having an amazing time this summer as the communications intern at a policy think tank focused on women’s economic justice. DC is an amazing city–so much to do on an intern budget! Nearly every night I find myself at a new public lecture, concert or happy hour.

I’ve also encountered some inspiring feminist women (who all have jobs I picture for myself in five years…or 30) both at work and after hours, and have come away from several events wanting to share, or at least record, some of my experiences.

If you’re my follower on Twitter or surfed here and don’t know me personally, I’ll tell you that I’m an undergraduate student at UNC-Chapel Hill studying journalism, French and women’s studies. While most of my friends graduated in May 2011, I still have one semester left to go at Carolina. I hope to start a master’s program in social work in the fall of 2012, with the ultimate goal of working in nonprofit management for a women’s advocacy group.

Outside of school I’m mainly involved in feminist advocacy work within my university community, including reproductive rights activism, violence prevention efforts, student journalism and student government.

I hope that I’ll post here throughout the summer when I walk away from a lecture or conversation excited and inspired, wanting to preserve what I’ve learned or observed.

To come: A recap of session 2 of New Faces, More Voices, a feminist leadership training program for interns run by the National Council of Women’s Organizations. I’m attending the program weekly with some of the other interns at my policy research group. This week we heard about domestic advocacy strategies from three powerful leaders in women’s rights activism–looking forward to writing about what I learned from them.