So, you just learned there are issues with the tech industry. Maybe you came here looking to learn more, or maybe someone else linked you to this document and suggested you read it. What now?
Table of Contents
Step 0: Please hold your questions until the end of Step 1.
Youâre learning new things and you might want to jump in with both feet. We get it!
But some of your friends who have already been here a while might not have the same level of energy. And they really wonât appreciate it if you ask a bunch of questions that are easily Google-able.
Itâs important to protect the emotional bandwidth of your marginalized friends. They donât want to be your teacher, they want to engage in discussion with you. But you have to do some up front work to get on their level.
Take a deep breath, have Google opened in a new tab, learn to take really good notes, and get ready for step one.
Be sure to check out our glossary
Step 1: Educate Yourself
Thatâs right, we said educate yourself. Weâre not going to do it for you.
Women of Color
Note: women of color deserve a separate category because of the complications of inhabiting intersectional identities and encountering overlapping bias.
Not a Black Chair - One womanâs story of racism, sexism, and discrimination at Squarespace.
Gender
Antisocial coding: my year at GitHub - An important, frustrating, heartbreaking read about what happens to marginalized people when HR decides they don't want you anymore.
"Females" in Open Source - "Events being âopen to everyoneâ was a token political statement. If they didnât recognize someone as being part of their in-group, all they had to do was make them uncomfortable. After all, that person is always âfreeâ to leave."
Reflecting On One Very, Very Strange Year At Uber - Possibly the most euphemistic title Iâve ever seen of one of these accounts. Sexism and racism are rampant at Uber. Who knew?
The Ping Pong Theory of Tech World Sexism - Explaining tech world sexism in comic strip form.
I Need Terrible Female Engineers - Why itâs exhausting that there are so many exemplary women. Stereotype threat and the pervasive myth of the "exceptional woman" in tech create a barrier that makes women believe they are never good enough. The same could be applied to the âexceptional minorityâ stereotype that exists in the tech industry.
If you think women in tech is just a pipeline problem, you haven't been paying attention
Race
Q&A With the Black Twitter Engineer Who Left Over Diversity Problems - What it says on the tin :)
Conforming to Succeed â A talk about what it means for people of color to succeed in tech
Bias Doesn't Start with Skin Color - How bias creeps into our hiring and evaluation process
General
Tweaking the Moral UI - How one woman came to understand why Codes of Conduct are necessary, and not just a PC buzzkill.
Why I Won't Make it Past Your Careers Page - A look at how innocuous design decisions in your recruitment efforts can alienate candidates and stall hiring diverse candidates.
The Other Side of Diversity - "I donât need to change to fit within my industry. My industry needs to change to make everyone feel included and accepted."
When Excellence Isn't Enough - "No matter how bad it is to talk about, ignoring it is worse."
A Hacking Hiatus - "Iâve felt increasingly uncomfortable and often downright disrespected within a community that I helped build.â
AlterConf - Archive of talks given at AlterConf, which was "a traveling conference series that provided safe opportunities for marginalized people and those who support them in the tech and gaming industries."
Step 2: Do Something About It
Knowing that there are problems isnât enough. Pick an organization that helps to improve the tech industry and donate your money or time.
Are you a meetup or conference organizer looking to make your event more inclusive? Or do you have some rad tips to help other organizers out? Check out Let's Do Better: a guide to radical inclusion in both physical and digital spaces in the tech industry.
Step 3: Keep Educating Yourself
Keep up with current events and developments.
Follow publications and individuals that frequently discuss problems with the tech industry.
Podcasts
- Greater Than Code because #PeopleMatter
- NPR's Code Switch Podcast - We're not as "post-racial" as we like to think
- Code Newbie - not strictly about intersectionality or dealing with marginalization, but Saron books a diverse lineup of guests that you should definitely keep an eye on!
Wiki/Timeline Resources
Timeline of Incidents of Sexism in Geek Communities including tech, gaming, comics, etc.
Step 4: Bonus Reading
More reading for extra credit. These resources might have less to do with tech specifically, but are good resources for getting acquainted with ideas about marginalization and social justice.
Understanding Privilege
Straight White Male: The Lowest Difficulty Setting There Is - Still having a bit of a hard time wrapping your head around the concept of privilege and how it can benefit you without you being aware of it? Hereâs a handy metaphor. :)
On Nerd Entitlement - Itâs understandable that nerds who felt shunned in high school might not be able to see the privilege that helped them get through. But imagine doing all that and THEN being rejected because of your race or gender.
Explaining Privilege to a Broke White Person
Why Diversity is Important
Parable of the Polygons - Small individual bias can lead to large collective bias. Our segregated past still haunts us, despite reduced bias now. We have to actively call for diversity to correct for de facto segregation. Learn how WITH INTERACTIVE MATH.
Alcohol and Inclusivity: Planning Tech Events with Non-Alcoholic Options - Plenty of people donât drink for religious, health, or personal reasons. Itâs not really any of our business why someone chooses not to drink, but it is our responsibility to make them feel included and not tie career growth and networking opportunities to alcohol consumption.
Sexism
I told my doctor I didnât want kids. She sent me to a therapist. - Women are still treated like they donât know whatâs good for themselves. Their mental health is often questioned if they vocalize not wanting to become parents and instead focus on their careers. Or worse, theyâre told they might be failures to their husbandsâ expectations if they choose to remain childless. Here is one womanâs story.
A female engineer is suing Tesla over sexism and harassment claims - "In a viral blog post, she alleged that management and HR dismissed her complaints about documented sexual harassment and sexism, protected a repeat offender because he was a "high performer" and suggested that women in the company werenât as skilled as men."
EXCLUSIVE: HOW TO BREAK UP THE SILICON VALLEY BOYSâ CLUB
An Advocate for Women in the Valley Quits Github, Citing Harassment
Why Women Leave Tech (infographic)
Why women leave tech: It's the culture, not because 'math is hard'
Delhi Rape Survivor Sues Uber For Illegally Accessing Medical Records
The Second Shift
Stop Calling Women Nags - Examples of emotional labor within one woman's life
Rhetorical Tactics and Discourse Fatigue
Sealioning: How to Deal with the Time-Wasting Troll Tactic Weâre All Tired Of
Derailing for Dummies - A satirical guide on how to derail a conversation about social justice. Use this guide to understand the tactics people consciously and unconsciously use to shut down discussion and discredit peopleâs lived experiences. See also this handy Derailment Bingo Card
4 Things Men Are Really Doing When They âPlay Devilâs Advocateâ Against Feminism - Why your devilâs advocate arguments arenât as novel or as necessary as you think they are.
An Open Letter to Privileged People Who Play Devilâs Advocate - A harsher and more direct open letter about devils advocacy, and what it does to people who have to defend themselves against it every day of their lives.