CONCEPT
Mutual Shaping of Technology and Gender
Wajcman's foundational thesis that technologies and gender relations
co-produce each other — tools are designed within gendered social relations that determine their effects, and the resulting technologies reshape the gender relations from which they emerged.
Mutual
shaping is the theoretical framework at the core of Wajcman's lifework, developed across
Feminism Confronts Technology (1991) and extended through three decades of research. The argument is that technologies are neither autonomous forces acting on passive societies nor neutral tools whose effects are determined by users. They are artifacts designed within specific social relations — relations of gender, class, race, and institutional power — that shape what the tool does, how it works, who it serves, and who it excludes. The tool in turn reshapes those relations, in ways that sometimes entrench existing inequalities and sometimes open space for their renegotiation. The mutual shaping is continuous: at every stage of design, deployment, and use, the social and the technical are being co-produced.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Applied to AI, the framework reveals that the tools shaping contemporary work are being developed within institutional cultures whose temporal, social,