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Participatory Design Theory: Using Technology and Social Media to Foster Civic Engagement


Participatory Design Theory: Using Technology and Social Media to Foster Civic Engagement

Hardback by Devisch, Oswald (Hasselt University, Belgium); Huybrechts, Liesbeth (Hasselt University, Belgium); De Ridder, Roel (Hasselt University, Belgium)

Participatory Design Theory: Using Technology and Social Media to Foster Civic Engagement

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ISBN:
9781138087682
Publication Date:
2 Oct 2018
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:
Routledge
Pages:
270 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 28 May - 2 Jun 2024
Participatory Design Theory: Using Technology and Social Media to Foster Civic Engagement

Description

In recent years, many countries all over Europe have witnessed a demand for a more direct form of democracy, ranging from improved clarity of information to being directly involved in decision-making procedures. Increasingly, governments are putting citizen participation at the centre of their policy objectives, striving for more transparency, to engage and empower local individuals and communities to collaborate on public projects and to encourage self-organization. This book explores the role of participatory design in keeping these participatory processes public. It addresses four specific lines of enquiry: how can the use and/or development of technologies and social media help to diversify, to coproduce, to interrupt and to document democratic design experiments? Aimed at researchers and academics in the fields of urban planning and participatory design, this book includes contributions from a range of experts across Europe including the UK, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Denmark, Austria, Spain, France, Romania, Hungary and Finland.

Contents

Introduction Part I: To diversify 1. Valuating narrative accounts in participatory planning processes: A case of co-creative storytelling in Antwerp, Belgium 2. Using a complex sound world for a participative dismantling and redefinition of the collective appropriation of industrial landscapes 3. Reflections on the counter-mapping of urban 'arrival neighborhoods' through Geoweb 2.0 in Brussels and Ghent 4. Data-driven design for civic participation: Introducing digital methods for on-going civic engagement for design in public space 5. Design initiatives in public spaces: eight interpretative lenses Part II: To co-produce 6. Sharing authorship and measuring influence in architectural training in neighbourhood communities 7. Digitally networked action: Developing self-organisation in 'weak-tie' residential communities through a 'Facebook group' 8. Communal garden and the liminal city 9. BIMBY: modeling, civic empowerment and the invention of a new profession Part III: To interrupt 10. Design, technology and social innovation: the serious game of TrafficO2 11. Daredevil or socializer? Exploring the relations between intrinsic motivation, game experience and player types in serious games with environmental narratives 12. Fabricam: Participatory urban interventions in a post-communist context 13. Rethinking the designer's role in the collective re-imagination of societies: A necessary reinterpretation of design for social innovation Part IV: To document 14. Participation within and beyond museums with the help of digital technologies 15. (Challenges and opportunities of) documentation practices of self-organised urban initiatives 16. Documentation games: A comparison between three games to support participatory design teams to document their design process

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