Dr Anni Dugdale
Senior Lecturer, SociologyFaculty of Business & Government
University of Canberra ACT 2601 AUSTRALIA
Office 6D37
phone 61-2-6201272 2
fax 61-2-62015239
email: anni.dugdale@canberra.edu.au
Qualifications
BSc DipEd (University of Adelaide); MA (Women's Studies) (UNSW); PhD (Science & Technology Studies) (UOW)
Research interests:
- Sociology of science and technology
- Gender, science and technology
- Reproductive technologies
- Sociology of health and medicine
- Science and technology policy
- Gender, technology and development
Recent publications:
DUGDALE A, Anne Daly, Franco Papandrea & Maria Maley Accessing e-government: challenges for citizens and organisations, International Review of Administrative Sciences, Vol. 71 No. 1, March 2005, pp.109-118.
DUGDALE A, Anne Daly, Franco Papandrea & Maria Maley Connecting the Dots - Accessing E-Government. Future Challenges for E-Government, Vol. 2. Institute of Public Administration Australia (ACT Division) & Australian Government Information Management Office: Canberra, 2004.
S. Milind; E Clark and A DUGDALE Fraud in e-government transactions risks and remedies. Future Challenges for E-Government, Vol. 2. Institute of Public Administration Australia (ACT Division) & Australian Government Information Management Office: Canberra, 2004.
DUGDALE A with Ancog A, Nair S, Fairbairn P, and Hermawati W Gender, Science & Technology: An Asia & Pacific Gender Mainstreaming Training Manual UNESCO Office Jakarta: UNDP 2003.
Jeacocke D, Heller R, Smith J, Anthony D, Williams JS, DUGDALE, A Combining quantitative and qualitative research to engage stakeholders in developing quality indicators in general practice, Ausralian Health Review 2002;25(4):12-8.
The Sexual Revolution and the Remaking of the IUD. In Jeanne Daly, Marilys Guillemin and Sophie Hill (eds) Technologies and Health: Critical Compromise. Oxford University Press, South Melbourne, 2001, pp.32-45.
(Ed.) Choreographing Resistance: Doing Materiality & Subjectivity in Feminist Technology Studies, Themed section of Australian Feminist Studies Vol 15 No 32, 2000.
Materiality: Juggling Sameness and Difference. In John Law and John Hassard (eds), Actor Network Theory and After, Blackwell, Oxford, 2000, pp. 113 - 135.
Intrauterine Contraceptive Devices, Situated Knowledges, and the Making of Women's Bodies. Australian Feminist Studies Vol 15 No 32, 2000, pp. 165 - 176.
Inserting Grafenberg's IUD into the Sex Reform Movement. In Donald MacKenzie and Judy Wajcman (eds.), The Social Shaping of Technology New Edition, Open University Press, Milton Keynes, 1999, pp. 318 - 324.
Reproductive Technologies - Machining Bodies, Desires, and Social Cohesion. In Britta Brenna, John Law, and Ingunn Moser (eds), Machines, Agency and Desire, Centre for Technology and Culture (TMV), Skriftserie 33, Oslo, 1998, pp.49-67.



