Whose Voices? is a podcast from Whose Knowledge?
Here we collect conversations we have with incredible activists, community builders and change makers, providing a space to discuss how we can re-imagine and re-design the internet together.
Whose Voices? is a podcast from Whose Knowledge?
Here we collect conversations we have with incredible activists, community builders and change makers, providing a space to discuss how we can re-imagine and re-design the internet together.
Most recent
Image by Claudia Pozo
Episode 32 | June 30, 2025
Putting People First: Community-Based Approaches to Accessible Language Technologies
Cecilia Tuyuc and the right of indigenous languages to live on the Internet
Arya Jeipea Karijo on “our existence is our truth”
Amira Dhalla on Internet, governance and getting comfortable with discomfort
On representation and consent: Reflections from Bangalore after a Wikipedia edit-a-thon
Arya Jeipea Karijo on queer digital utopias
Jake Orlowitz on Decolonizing the Internet as a reparative movement
Chipasha Mwansa on how to migrate reproductive justice work online
Jessica Horn and the need to center languages of struggle from the African continent
Unpacking Wikidata’s possibilities with Lydia Pintscher
Making structured data more accessible with Kira Wisniewski
Sandra Kwikiriza on the many ways online spaces can be safer for queer people
Meron Estefanos on Eritrean refugee advocacy, online harassment and self-care
Irene Mwendwa on language exclusion and coloniality online
Wangui Wa Goro and the role of new media content in decolonizing knowledge
“Ask for what you want”: Sydette Harry’s strategies on how to decolonize the Internet
Ana Alonso and the shifting attitudes toward Zapotec indigenous languages
Pamela Ofori-Boateng and the joy of highlighting women’s stories on Wikipedia
Esther Mwema on digital colonialism and who owns our undersea cables
Memory Kachambwa on knowledge justice in Africa
Subhashish Panigrahi and meaningful access to the internet in South Asia and beyond
Theresa Sainty and the path to revive the palawa kani language
Alice Kibombo explores how librarians can use structured data
“Nothing about us, without us” Dumisani Ndubane reflects on ways to decolonise structured data
Lena Anyuolo on community libraries and grassroots organising, queering the internet
Letícia Carolina Nascimento on “nothing about us without us”
Maame Akua Kyerewaa Marfo: For an Internet where we can tell our own stories
Majd Al-Shihabi and the mission to produce more knowledge and archives in Arabic
Rachel Kagoiya & Anasuya Sengupta on the journey to DTI-EA and beyond