Building a Wikipedia That Truly Represents Everyone

Together, we’re rewriting the narrative by ensuring Latino and Hispanic stories, achievements, and perspectives are accurately documented for millions of readers worldwide.

We’re a volunteer-led community improving Latino and Hispanic representation on Wikipedia—the world’s most visited encyclopedia. As part of WikiProject Latino and Hispanic Heritage, we’re ensuring our stories, culture, and contributions are accurately documented where millions seek information every day.

Through innovative tools and community-powered initiatives, we’re making it easier for everyone—from seasoned editors to complete beginners—to help build a more inclusive Wikipedia. Because who better to tell our stories than us?

Content Gap Discovery

Connect with fellow editors, find mentors, and join a supportive bilingual community. We provide the training, resources, and encouragement you need to make your first edit—and keep going.

Community-Powered

Connect with fellow editors, find mentors, and join a supportive bilingual community. We provide the training, resources, and encouragement you need to make your first edit—and keep going.

Accessible Tools

Our mobile-first platform removes barriers with intuitive design, step-by-step guidance, and full English/Spanish support. Built with accessibility at its core for editors of all abilities.

Any questions? We got you.

We’re here to support you every step of the way. From your first edit to becoming a Wikipedia champion, our community has your back.

General Information

How does ClanDi work?

ClanDi is a learning and collaboration space that helps people edit and improve Wikipedia responsibly. You complete short training modules, explore priority reproductive health and justice topics, and make edits supported by mentors and moderators. Every contribution strengthens public access to reliable information.

Yes. ClanDi is 100% free to use. The project is funded by mission-driven partners, allowing everyone to learn, collaborate, and edit at no cost.

Yes. ClanDi was co-designed by reproductive justice advocates and experienced Wikipedians. It aligns with Wikipedia’s editing standards and includes built-in privacy protections and moderation to keep the space safe and supportive.

Getting Started

How do I join ClanDi?

ClanDi is currently invite-only. Invitations are shared through partner reproductive justice organizations. If your organization is participating, you’ll receive a unique link to join.

We plan to open future versions of ClanDi to additional issue areas and partners.

For now, yes. This phase of ClanDi is focused on supporting reproductive health, rights, and justice organizations and their networks. Future phases may include additional social issue areas, such as climate change, education, or civic participation.

If you’re connected to one of our partner reproductive justice organizations, you’re welcome to join. Within those networks, ClanDi is open to staff, volunteers, students, and anyone engaged in advancing accurate public information on reproductive topics.

Not at all. ClanDi was built for newcomers. The in-app lessons walk you through everything from creating an account to citing sources and editing responsibly. Experienced editors will also find ways to mentor and contribute to the team.

Both work! ClanDi is mobile-friendly and designed for accessibility on phones, tablets, and desktops. You’ll find editing easier on a laptop, but all training and community features can be accessed from your phone.

Contributing to Wikipedia

How much time will this take?

You decide. Some contributors spend 30 minutes a week; others edit more regularly. Even one solid edit can make a real difference in how reproductive health information appears online.

Yes. ClanDi is fully bilingual in English and Spanish. You can edit, translate, or improve articles in either language or both. We’ll expand to more languages as the community grows.

This phase of ClanDi focuses exclusively on reproductive rights, health, and justice. That includes topics like abortion access, maternal health, contraception, sexual education, policy history, and movement leaders.

All edits follow Wikipedia’s standards for neutrality, verifiability, and reliable sourcing.

Yes. Many participants track their time and contributions through ClanDi to earn community service hours or volunteer recognition. Check with your school, university, or organization for their requirements.

Support & Safety

Will I get support along the way?

Absolutely. ClanDi mentors, moderators, and experienced Wikipedians are available through our community hub and office hours. You’ll always have someone to ask for feedback or help.

Mistakes are part of learning. Wikipedia has built-in systems for reviewing and correcting edits. ClanDi’s mentors can also help you understand what went wrong and how to fix it — no shame, just learning.

That’s up to you. When you create a Wikipedia account, you can choose a username that doesn’t reveal your identity. ClanDi never displays personal information publicly. You control what you share.