📖 Overview
Caroline Criado Perez is a British feminist author, journalist, and activist born in Brazil in 1984. She is best known for her influential campaigns addressing gender inequality and her bestselling book "Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men" (2019), which revealed systematic gender data gaps across multiple sectors of society.
Criado Perez gained prominence through several successful activism campaigns, including the Women's Room project, which worked to increase female expert representation in media. She also led a high-profile campaign that resulted in Jane Austen being featured on the British £10 note, and successfully advocated for the installation of Millicent Fawcett's statue in Parliament Square - the first statue of a woman in this historic location.
Her work in data analysis and gender bias has earned significant recognition in academic and public spheres. Through her writing and research, she has highlighted how the absence of sex-disaggregated data has led to discriminatory design in everything from urban planning to medical research, contributing substantially to contemporary discussions about gender equality and data-driven decision making.
👀 Reviews
Readers consistently highlight Criado Perez's thorough research and data-driven approach in "Invisible Women." Many cite the book's comprehensive documentation of gender bias in design, medicine, and technology.
What readers liked:
- Clear presentation of complex data
- Real-world examples that demonstrate impact
- Extensive citations and research backing claims
- Balance of statistical evidence with personal stories
What readers disliked:
- Repetitive examples and arguments
- Western-centric focus
- Dense statistical sections that slow pacing
- Limited discussion of solutions
Ratings across platforms:
- Goodreads: 4.4/5 (91,000+ ratings)
- Amazon: 4.7/5 (8,000+ ratings)
Reader quote: "Changed how I view everyday design decisions" - common sentiment across reviews
Critical quote: "Important message but becomes redundant after first few chapters" - repeated criticism on Goodreads
Many readers mention sharing specific examples from the book with colleagues and family members, indicating high impact on personal perspectives about gender bias.
📚 Books by Caroline Criado Perez
Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men (2019)
An examination of gender data gaps across various sectors including healthcare, technology, urban planning, and workplace design, showing how the default male bias in data collection impacts women's daily lives and safety.
Do it Like a Woman... and Change the World (2015) A collection of stories about women who have challenged the status quo in various fields, from a doctor working in war-torn Syria to activists fighting for representation in public spaces.
Do it Like a Woman... and Change the World (2015) A collection of stories about women who have challenged the status quo in various fields, from a doctor working in war-torn Syria to activists fighting for representation in public spaces.
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Kate Manne analyzes misogyny as a systemic force rather than individual bias in her works like "Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny." She brings philosophical rigor to feminist analysis while examining real-world manifestations of gender-based discrimination.
Mary Beard dissects the historical roots of gender inequality and power structures through her classical scholarship. Her work "Women & Power: A Manifesto" traces how women have been silenced throughout history and connects ancient patterns to modern discourse.
Angela Saini investigates how science has been misused to reinforce gender and racial biases in books like "Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong." She combines scientific journalism with critical analysis to expose flaws in research methodology and interpretation.
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