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Quantifying gendered participation in OpenStreetMap: responding to theories of female (under) representation in crowdsourced mapping

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posted on 2019-07-09, 08:24 authored by Z. Gardner, P. Mooney, S. De Sabbata, L. Dowthwaite
This paper presents the results of an exploratory quantitative analysis of gendered contributions to the online mapping project OpenStreetMap (OSM), in which previous research has identified a strong male participation bias. On these grounds, theories of representation in volunteered geographic information (VGI) have argued that this kind of crowdsourced data fails to embody the geospatial interests of the wider community. The observed effects of the bias however, remain conspicuously absent from discourses of VGI and gender, which proceed with little sense of impact. This study addresses this void by analysing OSM contributions by gender and thus identifies differences in men’s and women’s mapping practices. An online survey uniquely captured the OSM IDs as well as the declared gender of 293 OSM users. Statistics relating to users’ editing and tagging behaviours openly accessible via the ‘how did you contribute to OSM’ wiki page were subsequently analysed. The results reveal that volumes of overall activity as well editing and tagging actions in OSM remain significantly dominated by men. They also indicate subtle but impactful differences in men’s and women’s preferences for modifying and creating data, as well as the tagging categories to which they contribute. Discourses of gender and ICT, gender relations in online VGI environments and competing motivational factors are implicated in these observations. As well as updating estimates of the gender participation bias in OSM, this paper aims to inform and stimulate subsequent discourses of gender and representation towards a new rationale for widening participation in VGI.

Funding

The data collection and analysis period of this work was jointly funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences research Council and the University of Nottingham through a Daphne Jackson Fellowship. An Industrial Fellowship co-funded by Ordnance Survey and Defence Science and Technology Laboratory supported the writing of this paper.

History

Citation

GeoJournal, 2019

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/School of Geography, Geology and the Environment

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

GeoJournal

Publisher

Springer Verlag (Germany)

issn

0343-2521

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-07-09

Publisher version

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10708-019-10035-z

Language

en

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