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[Commlist] new book: FemTech Edited Collection
Tue Apr 12 15:08:35 GMT 2022
Who is FemTech for?: Intersectional Interventions in Women’s Digital Health
Edited by Dr. Lindsay Balfour
This edited collection draws from cultural studies and feminist science
and technology studies to offer a timely and exiting intervention into
the growing field of women’s digital health. It explores the
intersection of gender and embodied computing, with particular attention
to access barriers and the forms of biometric surveillance that operate
in wearables, ingestibles, and embeddables marketed to women (the
industry generally known as “FemTech”). While the most utilized and
profitable FemTech products include ovulation and fitness trackers,
reproductive technologies, contraceptive microchips, and “smart” pills,
this only represents a fraction of health concerns affecting women.
Moreover, while the industry, with a (2019) global market share of
18.75B (USD), is predicted to be worth 60B by 2027 (Emergen, 2020), this
occupies a small share of the overall digital health market, which is
estimated to grow from 84B (USD) to 221B (USD) in the same time span.
Although the availability of FemTech has been increasing over the last
decade, the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the need for discreet,
portable, and accessible digital tools that can be used in a
self-monitoring capacity as a response to an absence of access to
regular healthcare providers. Yet while COVID-19 has facilitated the
growth of FemTech, it has also exacerbated and exposed significant gaps
in the industry.
Whether a lack of critical literacy around digital health, design and
aesthetic impediments, the reality that women’s symptoms and pain are
not taken seriously, or the fact that most FemTech products still
presume a white, middle class, heterosexual, reproductive, and
able-bodied user, it is problematic that women (particularly those in
emerging markets) still have unequal access to basic reproductive
healthcare and women’s health technologies (Wiese, 2021). Moreover, the
FemTech industry as a whole exposes a more widespread and systemic
series of gaps within STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and
Mathematics). This volume aims to explore FemTech within the context of
Feminist Science and Technology Studies (FTST), whereby the
entanglements of race, class, gender, ability, and sexuality and other
social and cultural identities are brought to the fore. If STS is
inherently the consideration of the creation, development, and
consequences of science and technology in their historical, cultural,
and social contexts, then this collection asks, to borrow in part from
Sara Díaz, “what role can technoscience play in the movements to achieve
gender justice?” and how are the operations of power and privileged
exacerbated and challenged within the women’s digital health milleu?
(2020). In other words: Who is FemTech for?
This project, then, brings the sociology of health and gender into
conversation with digital culture and intelligent healthcare to respond
to the gaps in women’s access to self-monitored technologies of
wellbeing, and in consideration of intersectional marginalizations
within both the health and technology sectors where racialized and
low-income women suffer disproportionately. By addressing the gaps in
FemTech research and socio-cultural barriers to access, this volume will
critique the forms of knowledge and experience produced through medical
and cultural discourses regarding women’s bodies to both highlight the
inequalities in women’s digital health, and imagine alternative models
which optimises technology for women in a way that is safe, accessible,
and inclusive.
As products that simultaneously require intimate access and produce
intimate results, wearable, implantable, and ingestible technologies
should be desired, but with caution. The knowledge produced by these
devices allows users to experience technology at the level of the body
in a way that seems safe, intimate, and helpful but the biometric
practices of such devices risk subscribing to gendered and patriarchal
norms of knowledge and surveillance. Indeed the histories of Science and
Technology Studies, and feminist STS in particular, tell us that women –
and especially women of colour – have always been excluded from the
medical discourses paradoxically conceived around them.
Given, then, the gaps in investment and quality control, and taking
seriously the social barriers to access, this project asks: who is
FemTech really for? In the academic literature, for example, little
critique is given to the intersections of race, class, sexuality and
ability in products that largely assume a white, heterosexual, affluent,
childbearing, and able-bodied user. As such, FemTech leaves out a
significant portion of the global female population, despite its
potential to positively affect the health and well-being of women around
the world, particularly where class stratification, indigeneity, and
other social challenges exclude many women from this burgeoning market
while simultaneously making them more vulnerable to harm and illness.
While FemTech Collective’s Annual report (2021) acknowledges that “women
are much more than their reproductive capabilities, and women’s health
goes beyond the needs of fertility and reproduction,” more needs to be
done to limit the barriers many women face in accessing these products
due to a diversity of marginalizations based on race, socioeconomic
status, non-conforming gender and sexuality, (dis)ability and
neurodiversity, and so on. Ultimately, this project aims to be holistic
in approaching these gaps, to expose the lack of diversity and
accessibility in women’s digital healthcare, and prompt a series of
critical questions across the FemTech sector as a whole.
Chapter submissions are invited from a range of disciplinary backgrounds
including healthcare, digital media, the medical humanities, cultural
studies, science and technology studies, gender studies, disability
studies, as well as regional studies focused on the underserved areas of
women’s digital health. We take FemTech to include digital and/or
technological interventions marketed to women in the broadest sense
including both software and hardware. Possible topics might include:
- Biometric surveillance
- Consumer culture and FemTech as commodity
- Anti-violence or anti-assault tech
- Self-monitoring - Equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) in women’s
digital health
- Sexual health
- Mental health
- Taboos and stigmas
- Historical analyses of women’s health and emergent technologies
- Alternative digital health models
- Research, innovation, and investment in FemTech
- Regional or comparative analyses, particularly in Global South, ASEAN,
MENA, South American or Indigenous contexts
Prospective authors are asked to submit a 500 word abstract and 150 word
bio to (Lindsay.Balfour /at/ coventry.ac.uk) by June 1, 2022.
This collection is being developed with strong interest already
expressed by Palgrave McmIllan who are looking to expand their Science
and Technology Studies list with regards to women’s health. It will be
edited by Dr. Lindsay Balfour (she/her), Assistant Professor of Digital
Media in the Centre for Postdigital Cultures (CPC) at Coventry
University. Dr. Balfour’s research draws on the relationship between
humans and machines (HCI) and employs an intersectional feminist and
cultural studies perspective to look at digital intimacies and science
and technology studies. Currently, she is conducting feminist analyses
of surveillance capitalism and embodied computing including the concept
of “tracking” through wearables, implantables, and ingestibles.
Her work aims to engage academics, policymakers, and industry
stakeholders and will assess the extent to which women's digital health
might address barriers such as the lack of research, investment, quality
thresholds, and diversity, while remaining safe, accessible, and
sustainable. The project offers wider benefits concerning the global
health of women, such as those outlined in the UN Sustainable
Development Goals regarding Women and Girls, and in particular targets
focusing on sexual and reproductive health.
Dr. Balfour is a member of the Postdigital Intimacies Research Network
and the author of Hospitality in a Time of Terror, published in 2017 and
nominated for the Gustave O. Arit Award for best first book in the
Humanities. Her most recent publication are “#TimesUp for Siri and
Alexa: Sexual Violence and Virtual Domestic Assistants” and the
forthcoming “The Fit Man’s Burden: Gender and Commodity Racism in
Biometric Fitness Trackers.” Dr. Balfour also has experience working
with diverse stakeholders and constituent groups including educators,
curators, legal experts, government officials, community organizers, and
non-profit leaders.
Works Cited
Esmonde, Katelyn (2020). “‘There’s only so much data you can handle in
your life’: Accomodating and resisting self-surveillance in women’s
running and fitness practices.” Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise
and Health 12.1: 76-90.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/2159676X.2019.1617188
Lupton, Deborah (2017). The Quantified Self. Cambridge: Polity.
N.a. (2020). “Femtech Global Market Map.” Fermata Inc.
https://sg.hellofermata.com/blogs/blog/femtech-global-market-map-released-by-fermata-inc-nov-2020
N.a. (2020). “Femtech Market to Reach USD 60.01 Billion by 2027.”
Cicion.
https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/femtech-market-to-reach-usd-60-01-billion-by-2027-cagr-of-15-6-emergen-research-899205870.html
N.a. (2021). FemTech Collective Market Report. www.femtechcollective.com
Thomas, Jenny (2021). “FemTech has a key part to play in women’s health
strategy.” Digital Health London.
https://www.digitalhealth.net/2021/06/femtech-has-a-key-part-to-play-in-womens-health-strategy/
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