Two Jamaican academics are plotting to smash the tech bro patriarchy using new UN strategies. Dr. Ruby Brown and Professor Gunjan Mansingh just returned from a leadership summit in Marrakesh. These leaders from MIND and UWI Mona are crafting a national rollout plan to help local women survive the digital era. They joined sixty other delegates to create roadmaps for navigating artificial intelligence and management.
The mission involves creating personalized action plans to boost female influence in local institutions. Brown intends to update public sector training through the MIND framework. Mansingh realized that technology needs diverse guidance to actually drive equality. Both attendees want to scale these lessons across generations to fix the massive gender gap in digital spaces.
Data indicates that women barely hold any power in the technology sector globally. Females occupy only a tiny fraction of AI jobs and executive roles while facing constant online harassment. Artificial intelligence is apparently moving faster than governments can regulate it. This initiative hopes to build an alumni network that fights exclusion and supports marginalized groups.
UNDP rep Dr. Kishan Khoday labeled this effort a movement rather than a simple training. He claims investing in female digital leadership directly strengthens governance. The program used labs and storytelling to teach leadership in a volatile world. It seems the goal is ensuring women don't get left behind as the internet eats everything.
The mission involves creating personalized action plans to boost female influence in local institutions. Brown intends to update public sector training through the MIND framework. Mansingh realized that technology needs diverse guidance to actually drive equality. Both attendees want to scale these lessons across generations to fix the massive gender gap in digital spaces.
Data indicates that women barely hold any power in the technology sector globally. Females occupy only a tiny fraction of AI jobs and executive roles while facing constant online harassment. Artificial intelligence is apparently moving faster than governments can regulate it. This initiative hopes to build an alumni network that fights exclusion and supports marginalized groups.
UNDP rep Dr. Kishan Khoday labeled this effort a movement rather than a simple training. He claims investing in female digital leadership directly strengthens governance. The program used labs and storytelling to teach leadership in a volatile world. It seems the goal is ensuring women don't get left behind as the internet eats everything.