Happy 8th Anniversary Women in Red | July 2023

19 July

July: Happy 8th Anniversary Women in Red Alphabet run A & B Sports

2023 global initiatives: #1day1woman2023 Peace and Diplomacy

See also: Future events

Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR)!
Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our project's scope is women's representation on all language Wikipedias (biographies, women's works, women's issues, broadly construed). Did you know that, according to Humaniki, only 19.81% of the English Wikipedia's biographies are about women? Not impressed? Content gender gap is a form of systemic bias, and this is what WiR addresses. We invite you to participate, whenever you like, in whatever way suits you and your schedule. Editors of all genders are equally and warmly welcome at Women in Red!
Online event
1–31 July 2023
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Add to article talk pages
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  • ((WikiProject Biography))
  • ((WikiProject Women)) if born after 1950; or ((WikiProject Women's History)) if born before 1950.
  • Editathon banner: ((WIR-274))

July 19 is Women in Red's 8th Anniversary. We hope all members and those interested in closing the gender gap will share some of their wonderful experiences here. Comment on your first article, your most recent article, a topic that you have enjoyed working on, or salute a fellow WiRer.

Please add your comments here![edit]

I recognize the importance of this project every time I watch my daughter read articles that many of you have written and I notice she actually goes to the talk page to see if it was written during one of our edit-a-thons. Speaking as a woman and a reader, we can't begin to realize the impact WiR has had on generations of girls and women by providing for them good quality articles filled with compelling contributions to technology, science, music, writing, politics, academics and many other subjects that women have made throughout history.
Since joining I have met so many other amazing editors through this project, not the least of which is Rosiestep. Rosie, you, along with many others, have assisted in guiding this project through its infancy stage and into its current status as a very strong and growing project within this community. I am thankful for what you helped start and have continued to nurture. It is truly remarkable and only possible because of the many hundreds of editors that have created thousands of articles that has added to our collective knowledge about women and women related topics. I celebrate the past 8 years of WiR and hope for continued growth and success in the next 8 years and beyond. --ARoseWolf 16:33, 21 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]
19 July 2015, launching Women in Red from the main stage of Wikimania Mexico City. Hybrid presentation. Even then, Women in Red was trailblazing.
17 May 2019, the day that we met in-person for the first time.
Then, we had a few months to prepare a slidedeck before the July conference. During that time, we made a decision not only to address content gender gap's "what" and "why" as well as the "number" -- the percentage of women's biographies (now that this percentage was published), but we decided to go further, to address the "how" -- how might we improve things. Ergo, we planned for a "secret" launch of Women in Red to occur on 19 July during our Featured Speaker session at Wikimania Mexico City -- a great honor for us. We worked with Harej to design our project pages using WP:WikiProject X. We worked with Max Klein on a script/bot/techno-something to provide a periodic update on the percentage. But truly, we wondered if there'd be 15 minutes of interest after the launch; how long would people be interested in creating women's biographies in the 11 months that aren't Women's History Month? We decided not to set goals (e.g., "let's do this for a year and reassess"; "let's improve the percentage of women's biographies from 15.5% to [foo]"). Instead, we developed a mantra: "Let's move the needle." We told a story using pictures, numbers, and quotes, and we ended the session by inviting the audience to step into the story. Like e-lit, which offers multiple page-turning options, we offered the option to change history. We didn't focus on who you are; instead, we warmly welcomed all genders. We didn't offer potential meetups in lovely museums or libraries or cafes; instead, we suggested that wherever you are in the world, whatever time of day suits you, just write an article about a notable woman.
As soon as our session was over, YOU became the story -- all of you who improve women's representation on Wikipedia. And you have not disappointed. You have written thousands of new articles. You have written uncountable new "chapters" in the WiR storybook: 273 events; more than 1,000 redlists; more than 30,000 talkpage posts. You have mentored so many new editors on the "what", the "why", and the "how". YOU are changing the world and I am in your gratitude. --Rosiestep (talk) 00:50, 22 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Through this community and Women in Green I was inspired to work on getting women's articles to GA status. I remember reading the stub article on Jacquie Sturm and feeling that it really didn't do justice to this amazing woman and her impact on New Zealand literature. I was able to get it to GA status (thanks to Eddie891 as reviewer!) and that is still one of my prouder achievements.
I was lucky enough to attend ESEAP 2022 in Sydney on a scholarship and get to meet a number of editors in person, including Rosiestep and Oronsay (I honestly felt like I was meeting celebrities!). I am so inspired by all of you and have learned so much just from watching other WiR editors. The edit-a-thons are an especially great motivator for contributing. There is a whakataukī (Māori saying) that strikes me as relevant: Whangaia ka tupu ka puāwai. That which is nurtured blossoms and grows. :) A wonderful community has been nurtured here. Chocmilk03 (talk) 23:27, 22 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]
My first Wikipedia article creation, in 2007, was Mary Robinson (Maid of Buttermere), so I got off to a good start, but looking through the articles I created from then to 2015 there weren't many women at all (24 in 8 years, at a quick count), so WIR has had a major effect on my editing.
I'm increasingly worried about the deterioration of our precious encyclopedia over time as links go dead and as drive-by editors make careless (or worse) edits. I sometimes think I should take a break and stop creating articles but go back to look at each of my creations (or each of the creations in a WIR editathon) and check the links, look at the edit history, upgrade to my current standards (eg add ((use British English)) and ((use dmy dates)) when appropriate), and so on. I added a missing category to that first WIR article, Christine Williams, just now when I looked at it. Wikipedia: the infinite jigsaw puzzle, where there's always something else to add or improve. PamD 08:25, 12 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
PamD Were it not for your lessons in adding women to surname pages, disamb pages and the like, many of my articles would be outliers. I really appreciate your reminders of the importance of integration of women's articles and your help on the technical side when I have to create such a page. Like you, I enjoy writing about multi-faceted people and your work has inspired me to find women who overlap into multiple editathon topics. SusunW (talk) 18:32, 12 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Fortunaa! I too try to add women to wikidata. I am not sure, but I think if you fill in a field for occupation (and there is no article) the occupation will trigger the inclusion in a red list. If you are referring to getting the name to be included on one of the events like #1day1woman, please just add the name to the list. I have added Mary Nicholas Arnoldy to that list. That will ensure the article becomes part of the Women in Red family and get more eyeballs. The editors who create the article are the ones to add the articles to the lists. Happy editing! WomenArtistUpdates (talk) 23:35, 15 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Bless you for this answer! That's what I understood, too, so I'll check later and see if they all made it onto the list. Fortunaa (talk) 01:16, 16 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Bile rene, since you are a member, I think you are asking for the join button to be on the page? Is that what you mean? SusunW (talk) 16:42, 18 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I'm talking about the link for the online session if there will be one. Thanks
@SusunW Bile rene (talk) 17:04, 18 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Bile rene I don't think we are having a live meetup. I am waving from my home in southern Mexico to you in Cameroon. Isn't technology amazing. Perhaps for our next birthday we can think about that. SusunW (talk) 17:11, 18 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
TachibanaLouis And don't forget to add women to the many men's biographies on WP that omit the women in their lives. SusunW (talk) 16:42, 18 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Well, my gdandma used to tell me number 8 is in the shape of BoddhiDarma, a symbol of endurance and clinging on your vision: you fall seventh, then at 8th try, you will walk and navigate how you have wished for. The water is wide, and I wish to keep wading with you all, as nothing compares to you and the gender equality we support <3
PS, Good news is that a silent but giant wikipedia/ja will soon have a user group, maybe before 2026. Not a strong body to pull people's nose around, no a direct seedling of WiR, but I will irrigate it some wisdom I will learn here. (: --Omotecho (talk) 01:40, 27 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I have loved every minute of editing knowing the WiR are out there supporting, helping, advising and just generally cheering me on. I hope I have been able to give back just a smidgen of the same to others. ☕ Antiqueight chatter 14:58, 28 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Name your favorite meet-up...so far[edit]

World Contest logo
Thank you Ipigott for reminding me and providing the link to The World Contest! It was my first editathon and I got so much positive feedback. I have just spent/wasted an hour drilling down into the Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/The World Contest/Contents page and other pages. Some many editors were needed to make that happen. Each article needed to be checked by multiple editors. The talk page Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Women in Red/The World Contest contains all sorts of history. A real trip down memory lane. WomenArtistUpdates (talk) 20:10, 28 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Women in Red Meeting number 74 at Edinburgh Uni Library June 30 2023

A call-out to the University of Edinburgh for its outreach involving a wide range of ages and international editors (new and established) in their WiR monthly online all during the Covid lockdowns and also for the work done by staff and students on creating pages for the Scottish witches which has contributed hugely to a movement to seek a 'pardon' for the women and girls wrongly executed.Kaybeesquared (talk) 13:37, 30 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Hi Kaybeesquared! I remember we worked on sorting out the number of the Kenney siblings (12, with one dying in infancy). Interesting group of sisters, including Annie Kenney. WomenArtistUpdates (talk) 20:13, 30 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Ah yes, that was hugely helpful ! and indeed a very interesting family if women who helped the led the suffragette cause, despite working class roots.
Thank you. Kaybeesquared (talk) 09:37, 1 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]


Logos and barnstars[edit]

Photo gallery[edit]

relevant articles?[edit]

  1. India Isha Basant Joshi upgrade of my first article about a woman from 2007 - now in 5 languages!

First WIR DYK[edit]

1866 emancipation logo

Did You Know... that Edinburgh's "forgotten heroines", Eliza Wigham, Jane Smeal, Priscilla Bright McLaren, and Elizabeth Pease, were associated with the Edinburgh Ladies' Emancipation Society (logo pictured)? (Appeared July 20 2017)

Participants[edit]

For those who participated up to 20 July 2023, see the talk page.

Statistics[edit]

This table shows the change in percentage of women's bios on or close to our July 19 anniversary day each year.

July % Women's bios All bios
2014* 15.53 *Oct
2015 ?
2016 16.37 226,092 1,381,447
2017 17.02 251,256 1,476,026
2018 17.67 274,376 1,552,683
2019 17.89 293,499 1,640,546
2020 18.51 320,654 1,731,904
2021 18.99 346,438 1,825,451
2022 19.30 365,889 1,895,985
2023 19.61 382,244 1,949,683

Event templates[edit]

Women in Red 8th Anniversary
A piece of cake for you! Thank you for participating.