WikiWomenCamp/FAQ/Perspectives/Italy

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Flag of Italy.svg Italy[edit]

The gentle leadership of women in Italian projects. (From the ubiconografia i.e. iconography of the ubiquitous.)

Wikimedia Italia is mainly led by women. 3 out of 18 founding members were women. Frieda Brioschi and Giulia Clonfero are the most recurring members in the board, Frieda being president since 2005, with a single break when she was elected as community trustee in the WMF board (2007), shortly resigning; they're also the only members who got appointed as non-voting members when didn't stand as candidates, so that the average number of women in the 7 boards WMI had is 1.14 out of 5, or the 29 % of members of the extended board. Marina Milella, a woman, is one out of three chapters ombudspersons and the not-yet-official "observing and summarizing member" of the board. Civvì, former (founding) member, has been the first (part-time) employee of the chapter.

This situation reproduces with what happens "under the hood" on the Italian Wikipedia and other Italian projects: Frieda has been the first sysop and bureaucrat on most of them and is jokingly referred to as "la capa" ("the [female] boss"); 4 out of 11 bureaucrats it.wiki has had are women, but only about a dozen out of 180 sysops. Women are also authors of some of the (very few) semi-official "community sayings", such as "Bots are like children, they have to be taken care of (followed up)!", by Civvì (also a bureaucrat), sometimes referred to as "mommy Civvì"; in general, women have an important and perhaps peculiar role in the community dynamics, which is not easily visible from outside. There are also several (married) couples of very active users, one of which or both are sysops, for instance Xaura (Giulia Clonfero) and Marcok (one of the first sysops), Frieda and Jollyroger, Eumolpo and Eumolpa, etc.; this happens because wives accompany, "support" (and control!) their husbands also in their wiki activities (or viceversa) or because the couple met thanks to Wikimedia.

During the December 2011 fundraising appeal, no Italians, men or women, were featured as part of the appeal.

In December 2011, there were 22,720 women of all ages from Italy who were interested in Wikipedia on Facebook.[1]

Italian women perspective to free knowledge
Women in Italia