[Kaupunkitutkimus] Fwd: CfP: Digital Cities 11 – Communities & Technologies for More-than-Human Futures, 4 June 2019, Vienna

Sampo Ruoppila ruoppila at gmail.com
Fri Apr 19 09:38:53 EEST 2019


---------- Forwarded message ---------
Lähettäjä: Marcus Foth <m.foth at qut.edu.au>
Date: ti 16. huhtik. 2019 klo 2.21
Subject: CfP: Digital Cities 11 – Communities & Technologies for
More-than-Human Futures, 4 June 2019, Vienna
To: <COMURB_R21 at listserv.gsu.edu>


Call for Participation

Digital Cities 11: Communities and Technologies for More-than-Human Futures
4 June 2019, Vienna, Austria
https://research.qut.edu.au/designlab/events/dc11/

A symposium at the Communities & Technologies Conference – C&T 2019
https://2019.comtech.community

Expressions of interest open until 7 May 2019

Today, over half of the planet’s population lives in cities. Predictions
suggest that the urban population will increase by a factor of 1.5 by 2045
[35]. The world has entered the century of the city [27]. Population growth
and rapid urbanisation are putting pressure on existing city infrastructure
and services. In response to this pressure, city governments are turning to
smart city solutions, which promise to help cities to operate more
efficiently and effectively. These smart city solutions have been
criticised for their technology-centric approach, which leads to greater
efficiency and effectiveness often at the cost of negatively impacting the
experience of citizens [7,9,21,25]. Along with others, the symposium
organisers argue for the involvement of citizens and other stakeholders in
the design and rollout of smart cities to ensure that solutions are built
around people and their needs [7,10,12,15,34]. As a result, cities and
smart city technology companies and servi!
 ce providers are beginning to adopt human-centred design (HCD) and involve
citizens and communities in collaborative city making. This trend is
facilitated through well-documented and tested HCD methodologies that draw
on a large body of research and knowledge from the fields of human-computer
interaction (HCI) and interaction design. HCD methodologies offer methods,
tools, and techniques for considering people and communities in the design
process. The goal of HCD is to devise solutions that are desirable,
technically feasible, and financially viable [1,6].

However, it is increasingly becoming clear that the quality of life in
cities is not only linked to the wellbeing of citizens but also the health
of the natural environment [4]. While technological advancement has allowed
us to generally live healthier lives, it is increasingly also found to have
negatively impacted our environment. The motorisation of cities has led to
air pollution, posing one of the greatest health risks [14]. Modern urban
planning initiatives driven by technological innovation in the late 19th
century has given rise to the construction of motorways, reducing habitats
for people and wildlife [20]. There is a risk that the application of HCD
methodologies to smart city design will equally lead to anthropocentric
solutions – that is, solutions that are built to maximise the wellbeing of
people while failing to consider their impact on the natural environment.

The theme of Digital Cities 11 continues the debates and contributions to
the workshop “Avoiding Ecocidal Smart Cities: Participatory Design for
More-than-Human Futures” held at the 2018 Participatory Design Conference
(PDC) in Hasselt and Genk, Belgium [17]. The topics of interest for the
symposium include, but are not limited to the following:

..  HCI, interaction design, participatory design and use of smart cities,
urban informatics and IoT technologies that explore human / non-human /
more-than-human relations;
..  Methodological approaches, including opportunities and challenges for
designing in more-than-human worlds;
..  Speculative designs, design fictions, and art projects;
..  Ethical and legal considerations, e.g. design responses to a new legal
status of nature;
..  Designs that decentre the human or privilege other species;
..  Cultural aspects of sustainable smart cities in this space;
..  Theoretical perspectives from the literature e.g. Anthropocene,
Capitalocene [26], Chthulucene [13], and;
..  “World-making”, what could a more-than-human city be?


Audience
In C&T’s tradition of transdisciplinary engagement, Digital Cities 11
continues the debate into more-than-human futures across disciplinary
boundaries including STS [11,13], environmental humanities [18,22],
geography [2,28], planning [19], design [5,6,33] HCI [16,31], and others.
The main goal of Digital Cities 11 is to bring together scholars and
non-academic practitioners to consider and debate new approaches for the
design of post-anthropocentric cities that shift the focus in HCD
methodologies to also consider non-human stakeholders and perspectives. It
aims to develop new HCI theory by combining knowledge developed in the
field of STS to highlight questions about responsibility, accountability,
and ethics [32] with concerns emerging from other fields that consider
ecological perspectives.


Participation
If you are interested in participating in Digital Cities 11, we ask you to
send us an email with your expression of interest in the form of a short
(200-500 word) abstract. This can take the form of a statement outlining
your interests, questions, insights, or current research or practice.
Expressions of interest are open until 7 May 2019. Please email Marcus Foth
at m.foth [AT] qut.edu.au. EoIs will be reviewed by the symposium
organisers for relevance. If participants exceed places, we will choose a
balance of different perspectives on the symposium themes. After the
symposium, we will finalise our proposal for an edited book on the subject.


Digital Cities
Digital Cities is a symposium series held in conjunction with the
International Conference on Communities & Technologies. The Digital Cities
series started in 1999 and is the longest running academic forum that has
followed the intertwined development of cities and digital technologies.
All Digital Cities events resulted in high-quality book publications:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_informatics#Digital_Cities_Workshop_Series


Organisers
Marcus Foth, QUT Design Lab, Australia
Sara Heitlinger, City University of London, UK
Martin Tomitsch, Design Lab, University of Sydney, Australia
Rachel Clarke, Northumbria University, UK


--
Prof. Marcus Foth FACS

Professor of Urban Informatics
QUT Design Lab, Brisbane, Australia
m.foth at qut.edu.au – @sunday9pm – qut.design

Honorary Professor, School of Communication & Culture
Aarhus University, Denmark


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