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[Commlist] CHI’23 Workshop, CfP: Bridging Distances for Global Participation: Conducting and Theorizing Participatory Design and Research in Hybrid Contexts
Mon Feb 13 07:12:28 GMT 2023
Call for Papers
CHI’23 Workshop
Bridging Distances for Global Participation: Conducting and Theorizing
Participatory Design and Research in Hybrid Contexts
Workshop website: https://sites.google.com/view/urbanai/conducting-hybrid-pd
CHI conference website: https://chi2023.acm.org/
In this hybrid workshop, we explore the opportunities of conducting
multi- site participatory design (PD) and research through hybrid
present-telepresent participatory methods, and share issues, challenges,
methods, and empirical examples pertaining to this as a goal.
PD must increasingly be able to address and serve various global
contexts. Overall, then, there is a fundamental need to raise previously
unheard global voices in technology design and development, and to bring
various stakeholders together. The bread and butter of participatory
methodology has been physically co-located creative work with
participants, with the aim to immerse the practitioners in the use
context, and to learn about the practices, needs and values relevant for
the stakeholders in this context. This embedded, hands-on work is
crucial and arguably forms the basis of PD practice. Often, this has
also meant that PD research teams have been mostly physically
co-located, at least for the duration of the PD process. This approach
has fundamental validity, as PD requires an in-depth understanding of
the cultural context in which it is performed.
Nevertheless, this approach also has its drawbacks, as collocated work
means both geographical and financial limitations to the type of work
that can be accomplished. Conducting multi-site co-located work may be
prohibitively time-consuming and expensive, and may also require
extensive physical capabilities from both practitioners and
participants, leaving many voices unheard. Furthermore, the rapid
adoption of various synchronous and asynchronous communication methods
through online collaborative tools offer opportunities for more
continuous, more dispersed, and more diverse PD research settings and
processes.
During the world-wide social distancing efforts of 2020–2022, an
enormous leap forward was made seemingly overnight in adopting novel
modalities of participation and collaboration. As we have since moved
into a post social distancing world, it is important and timely to both
seize the lessons learned from the pandemic-induced forced hybridization
of PD, and to keep developing the potentialities that emerged from the
experience. However, this opportunity also raises several questions,
including: How can we enable various global stakeholders to take part in
global hybrid PD? How can PD practitioners work across cultural spheres
in distant settings, and how can we perform culturally aware and
sensitive work without ‘being there’? What can a partly
technology-mediated PD process consist of, what knowledge can it
produce, and what limitations does it have? What novel challenges and
opportunities pertaining to accessibility emerge in a
technology-mediated PD process? What values, competences and awareness
do PD practitioners need when conducting PD work in culturally diverse
hybrid settings? What PD processes or methods are not suited to hybrid
work and best left for the “nonline” world? What theories, methods and
lessons from other fields of research, e,g, from remote ethnography or
Computer-Supported Collaborative Work, could be applied?
We invite those interested to submit a position paper (3–4 pages) in the
SIGCHI Single column paper format
(https://www.acm.org/binaries/content/assets/publications/taps/acm_submission_template.docx).
These contributions may address, for example:
* Theoretical considerations: e.g., utilising key theoretical
concepts from various fields to build understanding of how to conduct
hybrid participatory design and research in various global contexts
* Case studies: empirical works that analyze experiences of hybrid
participatory design and research in various global contexts
* Design-based explorations in real-world settings: e.g.
implementation of participatory design and research approaches in
different global contexts in hybrid environments
* Methods: Methodologies that can contribute towards better
implementation of participation in various global contexts and in hybrid
environments
* Thematic issues; e.g. ethical issues; various user or stakeholder
groups, various areas of design, global perspectives, etc. pertaining to
conducting hybrid PD in multi-side, multi- cultural contexts
Extended Deadline: Feb 19, 2023 (23:59 AoE)
Notifications: Mar 1, 2023 (23:59 AoE)
Workshop Duration: one day
Date & place: Sunday April 23, Hybrid workshop (Hamburg, Germany / online)
Papers should be sent to: aale.luusua(at)oulu.fi
Organizers:
* Aale Luusua, University of Oulu, Finland
* Johanna Ylipulli, Aalto University, Finland
* Dani K. Raju, Studio Hasi, India
* Emilia Rönkkö, University of Oulu, Finland
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