Women at Wikimania 2012
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Wikimania 2012, held in Washington, D.C., had the largest participation of women recorded at any Wikimania. Over 100 women attended, making up approximately 10% of the participants, and reflecting the approximately 9% of women who participate in Wikipedia as a whole (as of 2012). This year, the conference was also preceded by AdaCamp DC, which may also be credited with an increased number of participants in both Wikimania and AdaCamp.
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Organizers
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- Katie Filbert, Coordinator for Sponsorships & on Program Committee, former president of Wikimedia DC
- Tiffany Smith, Program Chair
- Orsolya Virag, Deputy Program Chair
- Sarah Stierch, Program Committee
Mary Gardiner keynote
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Added by SarahVainWikiWomen's Lunch
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Added by SarahVainWomen speakers
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- Angelika Adam, "Supporting tools for a diversified Wikipedia"
- Adrienne Alix, "What place for the “small languages” on Wikimedia projects?" and panel participant in "A National GLAM Coordinator - a crucial yet overlooked role"
- Hilda Bastian, "US National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Health: systematic reviews as a resource for Wikipedia medical pages"
- Caroline Becker, "Chapters producing knowledge"
- Kelsey Brannan, "Wikipedia Translation and Transnational Scholarship"
- Laura Cassani, "Marine Corps Civil Information (MARCIM) Semantic Wiki"
- Leslie Carr, "Ask the Operators"
- Krystle Chung, "Women on wikiHow"
- Jessica Coates, "The Great Debate" panel participant
- Jutta von Dincklage, "A wiki platform to develop, publish, and update cancer treatment guidelines"
- Anja Ebersbach, "We want music scores!"
- Shani Evenstine, "A National GLAM Coordinator - a crucial yet overlooked role"
- Katie Filbert, "Wikipedia in Twitter age"
- Heather Ford, panel participant in "Wikipedia in Twitter age"
- Barbara Fischer, panel participant in "A National GLAM Coordinator - a crucial yet overlooked role"
- Mary Gardiner, "Fostering diversity: not a boring chore, a critical opportunity"
- Sue Gardner, "Wikimedia Foundation: The Year In Review and The Year Ahead"
- Sumana Harihareswara, "Transparency and collaboration in Wikimedia engineering" and "What Does THAT mean? Engineering Jargon And Procedures Explained"
- Katie Horn, "Fundraising: Under the Hood"
- Mona Ibrahim, "College Students' Perceptions of the Wikipedia-Assignment Experience"
- Elly Köpf, "How to motivate older people to become active Wikipedians?"
- Dr. Allison Kupietzky, "Wiki, Women and Museums: The makings of a successful GLAM-WIKI project"
- Poupou l'quourouce, "A Room of One's Own - Virgina Woolf and Female Wikipedia Editing"
- Delphine Ménard, "Why Does Wikimedia Need Money When We Have Volunteers?"
- Beth Simone Noveck, "Wiki Government: How Technology Can Make Government Better, Democracy Stronger, and Citizens More Powerful"
- Iolanda Pensa, "The Power of Wikipedia: Legitimacy and Territorial Control"
- Lydia Pintscher, "Let's talk about Wikidata and what it means for you!"
- Lori Byrd Phillips, "QRpedia and you," "State of GLAM-Wiki in the US" and panel participant in "A National GLAM Coordinator: a crucial yet overlooked role"
- Maryana Pinchuk, "Welcome to Wikipedia, now please go away: improving how we communicate with new editors" and ""This is my voice": the motivations of highly active Wikipedians"
- Noopur Raval, "GLAM and Outreach in India" and panel participant in "A National GLAM Coordinator: a crucial yet overlooked role"
- Jane Richardson, "A Wikipedian content-expert soliciting expert editors"
- Risker, "Blacking out Wikipedia"
- Alolita Sharma, "The next billion users on Wikipedia with Open Source Webfonts"
- Sara Snyder, "5 Reasons Why Archives are an Untapped Goldmine for Wikimedians"
- Sarah Stierch, "Wikimedia Community Fellows: what we're researching, piloting and doing to help the movement", "10 Women in 10 Minutes", and panel participant in "Engage or Perish"
- Leigh Thelmadatter, "Experimenting with Wikipedia at a Mexican university"
- Pamela Wright, GLAM professionals panel participant
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