TY - GEN
T1 - Socio-technical HCI for Ethical Value Exchange: A Case of Service Design and Innovation ‘at the Margins’ in Resource Constrained Environments
AU - Abdelnour-Nocera, José
AU - Nielsen, Lene
AU - Christensen, Lars Rune
AU - Clemmensen, Torkil
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Ensuring ethical value exchange is moving to the forefront of the global challenges that HCI will have to address in the coming years In this position paper, we argue that applying a context-sensitive, sociotechnical approach to HCI can help meet the challenge. The background is that the life of marginalized people in contemporary society is challenging and uncertain. The marginalized can face health and cognitive issues as well as a lack of stability of social structures such as family, work and social inclusion. Three questions are of concern when innovating together with people ‘at the margins’: how can we describe users without attempting to stereotype badly, what sociotechnical HCI methods fit the local societal context, and how to make the design sustainable in face of current planetary challenges (e.g., climate change)? We adapt the sociotechnical HCI approach called human work interaction design (HWID) to meet the challenges of designing for ethical value exchange. We present three cases of service design, and suggest how to add a fourth similar case using the HWID approach during the INTERACT ‘field trip plus workshop’. We conclude that applying a context sensitive sociotechnical HCI framework implies that both the backend and frontend of service design and product innovations should be executed and valorized from with the local context.
AB - Ensuring ethical value exchange is moving to the forefront of the global challenges that HCI will have to address in the coming years In this position paper, we argue that applying a context-sensitive, sociotechnical approach to HCI can help meet the challenge. The background is that the life of marginalized people in contemporary society is challenging and uncertain. The marginalized can face health and cognitive issues as well as a lack of stability of social structures such as family, work and social inclusion. Three questions are of concern when innovating together with people ‘at the margins’: how can we describe users without attempting to stereotype badly, what sociotechnical HCI methods fit the local societal context, and how to make the design sustainable in face of current planetary challenges (e.g., climate change)? We adapt the sociotechnical HCI approach called human work interaction design (HWID) to meet the challenges of designing for ethical value exchange. We present three cases of service design, and suggest how to add a fourth similar case using the HWID approach during the INTERACT ‘field trip plus workshop’. We conclude that applying a context sensitive sociotechnical HCI framework implies that both the backend and frontend of service design and product innovations should be executed and valorized from with the local context.
KW - ethical value exchange
KW - sociotechnical approach
KW - human-computer interaction (HCI)
KW - marginalized communities
KW - sustainable design
KW - human work interaction design (HWID)
KW - service design
KW - context-sensitive design
KW - planetary challenges
KW - social inclusion
M3 - Article in proceedings
SN - 9788193126097
T3 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science
SP - 254
EP - 262
BT - The 16th IFIP TC13 International Conference on Human–Computer Interaction
PB - Springer
ER -