Abstract
This article addresses urgent calls for action and advocates for equitable, responsible and participatory research and practices that, while engaging with contemporary societal landscapes, and global polycrises, directly contribute to the collaborative shaping of alternative futures and real-world impact. Over the past decade, Participatory Design (PD) research, theory, and practice - along with its core values of participation, empowerment, and democracy - have diversified and evolved in novel directions. Drawing on surveys of contemporary engagements with global and societal challenges, this article discusses how PD engages with three interrelated crises: technological, onto-epistemological, and socio-ecological. Based on this work, we foreground four emerging research agendas in contemporary PD - politicising, diversifying, relationality, and transforming, and show how they extend PD's theory, method and practice towards societal impact and change. Drawing together such research agendas across diverse disciplines, continents and practices, we demonstrate how contemporary PD can be leveraged to address today's acute crises.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | AAR '25: Proceedings of the sixth decennial Aarhus conference : Computing X Crisis |
| Number of pages | 20 |
| Publisher | Association for Computing Machinery, Inc |
| Publication date | 17 Aug 2025 |
| Pages | 182-201 |
| ISBN (Electronic) | 9798400720031 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 17 Aug 2025 |
| Event | 6th Decennial Aarhus Conference on Computing X Crisis - Aarhus Universitet, Aarhus, Denmark Duration: 18 Aug 2025 → 22 Aug 2025 Conference number: 6 https://aarhus2025.org/ |
Conference
| Conference | 6th Decennial Aarhus Conference on Computing X Crisis |
|---|---|
| Number | 6 |
| Location | Aarhus Universitet |
| Country/Territory | Denmark |
| City | Aarhus |
| Period | 18/08/2025 → 22/08/2025 |
| Other | The 1975, 1985 and 1995 Aarhus conferences focussed on computing in working life in the context of democracy. While both the 2005 and 2015 conferences acknowledged that computing influences most parts of human life (civic life, the welfare state, health, learning, leisure, culture, intimacy, …), the 2015 conference explicitly called for critical perspectives and alternatives in alignment with utopian principles—that is, the hope that things might not only be different but also radically better<br/><br/>Today, 'crisis' characterises seemingly perilous moments linked to the climate, economic and social inequality, democracy, relations among societies and, more broadly, a flourishing life for all critters, human and otherwise. And at the same time computing seems omnipresent, providing glimmers of hope but at the same time acting as a source of the troubles. |
| Internet address |
| Series | Conference Proceedings - Computing X Crisis: 6th Decennial Aarhus Conference, AAR 2025 |
|---|
Keywords
- Contemporary Participatory Design
- Crisis
- Research Agendas
- Societal impact