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Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men

Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men

Previous price: $18.00 Current price: $17.00
Publication Date: March 2nd, 2021
Publisher:
Abrams Press
ISBN:
9781419735219
Pages:
448
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Description

"This is an eye-opening account of the way women have been sabotaged by gender bias in everyday design. Illuminating, infuriating, astonishing."



—Barry

About the Author

Caroline Criado Perez is a writer, broadcaster, and feminist activist, named Liberty Human Rights Campaigner of the Year and OBE by the Queen. She has a degree in English language and literature from the University of Oxford, and she studied behavioral and feminist economics at the London School of Economics. She lives in London.

Praise for Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men

“A provocative, vital book.”
— Publishers Weekly

"In clear language, the author builds a strong case for greater inclusion with this thoughtful and surprisingly humorous view of institutional bias and gendered information gaps. While some readers may suggest that equality has arrived and gender no longer matters, this book, which should have wide popular appeal, is a solid corrective to that line of thought."
— Kirkus Reviews

“Invisible Women is a game-changer; an uncompromising blitz of facts, sad, mad, bad and funny, making an unanswerable case and doing so brilliantly. … the ambition and scope — and sheer originality — of Invisible Women is huge; no less than the story of what happens when we forget to account for half of humanity. It should be on every policymaker, politician and manager’s shelves.”
— The Times (UK)

“Read this book and then tell me the patriarchy is a figment of my imagination.”
— Jeanette Winterson

“The thoroughness of Invisible Women doesn’t detract from its absolute readability.  This is entertaining, scholarly and so very important.”
— Adam Rutherford

“Brilliant … Invisible Women lays out in impressive detail the many ways that human beings are presumed to be male, as well as the wide-reaching effects of this distorted view of humanity.”
— Katha Pollitt, The Nation

“The most important book I have ever read.”
— Women You Should Know

“An excellent book packed with practical information of the kind required by those attempting to dismantle the patriarchy.”
— The Irish Times

“Invisible Women is an absorbing cornucopia of thought-provoking facts - fascinating, alarming and face-palming in equal measures. Caroline Criado Perez shows up the shortcomings of a world designed for men by men. The consequences of treating men as the default option, or women just as smaller men – if they get considered at all - has wide-reaching implications for everything (and everyone) from snow clearing to seat-belts and many branches of medicine. I shall certainly think of this book next time I have a heart attack, a car crash or just want to go to the toilet at the theatre.”
— Georgina Rippon

"An incredible book."
— Roman Mars, "99% Invisible"

“As Invisible Women illuminates, in an almost overwhelming way, communities pay tremendous costs for the gender data gap: costs of income, time, women's health, and sometimes women's lives.”
— Bustle

“Even with all the progress women have made in the last few decades, Invisible Women proves we still have a long way to go. Reading this book—preferably in a comfortably warm room—is the first step.”
— PureWow

“Feminist campaigner, Caroline Criado-Perez left us gobsmacked with Invisible Women, an in-depth look at how women are (still) excluded in society.” 
— Refinery29 (UK)

“This book is a devastating indictment of institutionalised complacency and a rallying cry to fight back… Invisible Women should propel women into action.”
— Sunday Times (UK)

“A diligently researched and clearly written exposé.”
— Booklist

“A powerful call to bust the myths and bridge the gap.”
— Nature

“There’s a sense of rage simmering beneath the surface of Invisible Women, every now and then it bubbles up in the text, but the book’s force doesn’t derive from the power of its rhetoric – instead it’s the steady, unrelenting accumulation of evidence, the sheer weight of her argument. … Reading Invisible Women one might experience, as I did, the dizzying sensation that so many of my own stories, so many of my friends’ stories, so many incidents I had experienced as discrete and unrelated – at work, at home, on the streets, in hospital – are in fact interconnected. As women, we are so used to contorting ourselves to fit into men-shaped spaces, we’ve learned to ignore how often it hurts.”
— The New Statesman

“Brilliant.”
— The Economist

“Criado Perez doesn’t set out to prove a vast conspiracy; she simply wields data like a laser, slicing cleanly through the fog of unconscious and unthinking preferences.”
— The Guardian

“Shocking, yet essential, reading.”
— Stylist

"A blisteringly good book... never less than eye-opening, and frequently staggering."
— The Bookseller