Dissemination activities
2022 European Researchers’ Night (Seville) ( link), 30/9/2022, a talk entitled “Gendered cities: Studying urban gender bias through street names”.
TV and radio coverage
Interview on Canal Sur ( link), in the programme Andalucía Despierta, 18/10/2022, featuring the results of the article “Gendered cities: Studying urban gender bias through street names”.
Interview on La tarde de Canal Sur Radio ( link), 2/3/2023, featuring the article “The spatial distribution of street names: a web app to visualize and download street-name data”.
Interview on Radio Televisión Pública de Asturias (RTPA) ( link), 14/10/2022, featuring the results of the article “Gendered cities: Studying urban gender bias through street names”.
Interview on Onda Local de Andalucía (OLA) ( link), 26/9/2022, featuring the results of the article “Gendered cities: Studying urban gender bias through street names”.
Press coverage
Back cover of EL PAÍS ( link), 30/6/2021, titled “The street map is a male thing”. Also in the digital edition at this link.
EL PAÍS ( link), 1/3/2023, titled “The names of the streets portray us: many Virgins, Saints and Nobles, little science and fewer women than men”.
The Conversation ( link), 12/10/2022, titled “The spanish street map has no woman’s name”. Republished in Canarias 7, León Noticias, HOY, El Correo, Ideal, El Comercio, El Diario Vasco, La Rioja, El Diario Montañés, Las Provincias (Valencia), El Norte de Castilla, El Obrero, Diario SUR, RADIOCABLE.COM.
University Pablo de Olavide ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “X-ray of the spanish street map: only 12,7% of the streets are named after a woman”.
University Pablo de Olavide ( link), 7/2/2023, titled “UPO researchers create a web app to visualize street names from Spain, Europe and United States”. Republished in La Vanguardia, Fundación para el Conocimiento madri+d, La Noción.
El Confidencial ( link), 13/4/2023, titled “PSOE commits itself to promoting ‘feminist street maps’ in the cities it governs”.
El Plural ( link), 15/4/2023, titled “PSOE will be presenting its bet to gendered urban planning and an egalitarian street map in Valencia”.
La Nueva España ( link), 7/11/2021, titled “Expelled from the streets”.
El Español ( link), 8/7/2021, titled “The machism in the spanish street map: only 12% of streets are named after women, according to study”.
EL DEBATE ( link), 22/9/2022, titled “Iglesia, Cervantes o Clara Campoamor: the most repeated street names in Spain”.
Diario de Mallorca ( link), 15/11/2021, titled “Expelled from the streets”.
ElDiario.es ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “X-ray of the spanish street map: only 12,7% of the streets are named after a woman”.
ElDiario.es ( link), 21/9/2022, titled “Cordoba, third city in Spain with the highest number of women’s street names in Spain”.
20 minutos ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “A study reveals that only 12.7% of the Spanish street map has a woman’s name”.
Diario de Sevilla ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “Are women’s names missing in the Seville street map?”.
Diario de Sevilla ( link), 20/9/2022, titled “Few streets are named after women in Spain”.
NIUS ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “Only 1 in 10 streets in Spain has been named after a woman in the last 20 years”.
El Huffington Post ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “The machism in the spanish street map: only 12.7% of streets are named after women”.
La Vanguardia ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “UPO study reveals that only 12.7% of streets are named after women”.
La Razón ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “Only 12.7% of streets are named after women”.
La Voz de Galicia ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “Only 12.7% of the spanish streets are named after women”.
SevillaActualidad ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “Only the 12.7% of the spanish street map has a woman’s name”.
Huelva Información ( link), 20/9/2022, titled “Huelva is the Andalusian province with the least number of streets named after women”.
lavozdelsur.es ( link), 19/9/2022, titled “The streets belong to men: a study reveals that only 12.7% of them are named after women”.
El Correo Gallego ( link), 3/10/2022, titled “Galicia, among the communities with more equality in its streets”.
La Voz de Asturias ( link), 7/10/2022, titled “Gijón, the city with the most feminist street map”.
La Voz de Asturias ( link), 24/12/2021, titled “Rebelión contra’l machismu del alcalde d’Uviéu y de la so corporación”.
León Noticias ( link), ,14/10/2022 titled “The streets of León do not have women’s names: only 10% of the streets in the province are named after women”.
Somos Comarca ( link), 16/10/2022, titled “Streets with female names”.
Nada es Gratis ( link), 19/04/2018, titled “What do street names tell us and why is it important for the social sciences?”.
Scottish Express ( link), 15/11/2017, titled “Your street’s name says a lot about you, Scots research claims”.
The Scotsman ( link), 15/11/2017, titled “Research finds your street name shows how Scottish you feel”.
Scottish Daily Mail ( link), 16/11/2017, titled “Street names sign of national identity”.
University of St Andrews ( link), 15/11/2017, titled “Street names indicate how “Scottish” you feel”.
The Times ( link), 16/11/2017, titled “A street name can affect how Scottish you feel”.
The Herald ( link), 15/11/2017, titled “St Andrews University research shows British street names ‘make residents feel less Scottish'”.
The Courier ( link), 15/11/2017, titled “‘British’ street names influence Scottish identity”.
ElDiario.es ( link), 8/8/2020, titled “When BBVA managed to name a street ‘Azul’ and other roads that changed their names for economic reasons”.
COPE ( link), 2/3/2023, titled “An interactive map allows to check if your street has changed its name throughout history. What was its name?”.
El Periódico de Aragón ( link), 2/3/2023, titled “This is how Aragon looks on the Spanish and European street maps”.
La voz de Galicia ( link), 9/3/2023, titled “A Coruña has no woman’s name: a street map without gender quotas”.
European Data Journalism Network ( link), 9/3/2023, titled “Who are Italy’s city streets dedicated to?”.