Note: This comment was in response to Lynn Root's discussion on women in the Django / tech community at Djangocon Europe 2012.*
The issue of women in our community has been very prominent recently—mostly due to negative situations where something went wrong, but sometimes because of thoughtful discussions about how to actually improve things. Your talk is one of the latter—thank you for giving it!
Like any sensitive topic, most attempts to discuss the issue end up going nowhere good. Sometimes it veers into “women tend to,” sometimes it veers into a lot of self-congratulation on how enlightened we are to be even discussing it. It’s been my experience that none of these are really helpful in getting actionable things I can do.
Obviously, having a safe environment for women is a precondition, and I don’t think it’s a solved problem, but what else should we be spending our cpu cycles on? Say we have a conference code of conduct which is properly enforced. What should we be figuring out solutions for next?
@econchick - since you're here, I wanna dig in a bit to this idea. Someone you said in your introduction (that's echoed above) is this thought of looking at getting people involved instead of focusing on women. So, following that idea, should we maybe steal a page from the women in tech movement and start creating PyNewbies meetups? Noobs Who Code? Noobs + 1 events?
I like the idea, but I wonder if it would work -- people self-identify as women, but I don't know how many people like to self-identify as newbies. It's... intimidating to admit you don't know anything. And how do you do outreach? New users, by definition, aren't in our community! We can't offer "new attendee" scholarships to PyCon 'cause the people who're eligible don't know that there's a Py to be Con'd!
But... I do really like the idea of a more general focus on "outreach" rather than "diversity" -- the former leads to the latter, and has other attendant benefits to boot.
So... thoughts?