Computer ethics (2nd ed.)
Computer ethics: cautionary tales and ethical dilemmas in computing
Computer ethics: cautionary tales and ethical dilemmas in computing
Gendered by design?: information technology and office systems
Gendered by design?: information technology and office systems
Information systems development and data modeling: conceptual and philosophical foundations
Information systems development and data modeling: conceptual and philosophical foundations
Emerging trends in the WWW user population
Communications of the ACM
A gift of fire: social, legal, and ethical issues in computing
A gift of fire: social, legal, and ethical issues in computing
Communications of the ACM
Artificial knowing: gender and the thinking machine
Artificial knowing: gender and the thinking machine
Hackers: Crime in the Digital Sublime
Hackers: Crime in the Digital Sublime
Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution
Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution
Case Studies in Information and Computer Ethics
Case Studies in Information and Computer Ethics
Information, Systems and Information Systems: Making Sense of the Field
Information, Systems and Information Systems: Making Sense of the Field
Woman into Computing: Selected Papers 1988-1990
Woman into Computing: Selected Papers 1988-1990
ACM SIGCAS Computers and Society
Cyberstalking and Internet pornography: Gender and the gaze
Ethics and Information Technology
A nexus of Cyber-Geography and Cyber-Psychology: Topos/"Notopia" and identity in hacking
Computers in Human Behavior
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
How to build an appropriate information ethics code for enterprises in Chinese cultural society
Computers in Human Behavior
A structured review of IS research on gender and IT
Proceedings of the 2013 annual conference on Computers and people research
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Computer ethics is a relatively young discipline,hence it needs time both for reflection and forexploring alternative ethical standpoints in buildingup its own theoretical framework. Feminist ethics isoffered as one such alternative particularly to informissues of equality and power. We argue that feministethics is not narrowly confined to `women's issues'but is an approach with wider egalitarianapplications. The rise of feminist ethics in relationto feminist theory in general is described and withinthat the work of Gilligan and others on an `ethic ofcare'. We argue for the need to connect theory toempirical evidence. Empirical studies of gender andbusiness and computer ethics are reviewed. We noteconcerns with surveying a student audience, the issueof how far questionnaires and interviews can get tothe heart of ethical beliefs and problems ofperforming statistical analyses of quantitative data.Although we recognize them, our own small surveycannot avoid all these problems. Nevertheless byrefining our scenarios we are able to offer analternative reading of a hacking problem in terms ofan ethic of care thereby pointing a way forward forfuture research in computer ethics inspired byfeminist theory.