Historical, manuscript, and image resources that explore women's roles in the US economy from the Open Collections Program, Harvard University 1870-1930
Note that these are primary sources in the humanities/history sense of the word, not in the sciences sense; for scientific primary sources, look to an article database.
Atlantis is a scholarly research journal devoted to critical work in a variety of formats that reflects current scholarship and approaches to the discipline of Women's and Gender Studies.
The Algorithmic Justice League is an organization that combines art and research to illuminate the social implications and harms of artificial intelligence.
"Together with activists, educators, writers, technologists and designers SUPERRR Lab has developed a set of Feminist Tech Principles and a Feminist Tech Card Deck. These elements are the first step towards the development of a Feminist Tech Policy that can be used by policy makers, non-profits and other actors."
This module from Feminist Action Lab "explores key principles of access, public participation, free and open source software, agency, freedom of expression and resistance that are essential to feminist technologies."
UN Women is the UN organization delivering programmes, policies and standards that uphold women’s human rights and ensure that every woman and girl lives up to her full potential.
Join Dr Eleanor Drage and Dr Kerry McInerney as they ask the experts: what is good technology? Is ‘good’ technology even possible? And how can feminism help us work towards it?
Women, Science, and Technology by Mary Wyer (Editor); Mary Barbercheck (Editor); Hatice Ozturk (Editor); Marta Wayne (Editor); Donna Cookmeyer (Editor)
The Handbook of Science and Technology Studies, Fourth Edition by Ulrike Felt (Editor); Rayvon Fouche (Editor); Clark A. Miller (Editor); Laurel Smith-Doerr (Editor)