Conference Agenda
Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
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Daily Overview |
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PAPERS: Power plays: Values, Place, and Community
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Empowerment for Aging Design: A Framework to reframe the design of solutions for Older Adults in the Global South Universidad de Los Andes, Colombia Design for older adults in Latin America remains strongly shaped by deficit-based and assistentialist assumptions that reduce aging to decline. Grounded in empowerment-oriented and resource-based design, this study explores how empowerment values can reframe the ideation of solutions for older people. Workshops conducted in five Colombian cities, supported by the Empowerment Nodes tool, enabled the identification of value expressions often overlooked in traditional design approaches. The findings culminated in the Empowerment Framework for Aging Design, a three-layered model composed of seven Silver Goals, fourteen Empowerment Values, and thirty-seven Enhancers, each paired with limiting counterparts that reveal how ageist paradigms subtly persist in design practice. The framework provides designers with a practical and reflective structure for generating situated, inclusive, and agency-oriented solutions. By grounding value construction in a Global South perspective, this study challenges dominant narratives of decline and expands the representational scope of aging in design. View Paper: https://doi.org/10.21606/drs.2026.354
Designing for Themselves: The Gearbox Model of Value-Reclaiming Design within Grassroots Sports Communities the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong S.A.R. (China) Grassroots sports communities (GSCs) express and impact values through everyday design practices that build belonging, identity, and agency. Adopting qualitative multi-case analysis of representative GSCs (n=10), this study explores how these communities define and reclaim their values through design practice. Four modalities are identified: 1) narrative re-authoring, 2) aesthetic re-coding, 3) collaborative re-making, and 4) ethical re-grounding. These modalities constitute a dynamic process wherein design functions as a relational infrastructure for collective meaning-making. Based on these findings, the study generates a Gearbox Model of Value-Reclaiming Design, theorising how communal design agency is exercised through dynamic and recursive interplay. The model offers a transferable tool to understand how self-organised communities create and keep shared value through everyday design practice. This study defines these actions as 'designing for themselves', showing how community-driven design agency formed and supports more grounded forms of social innovation. View Paper: https://doi.org/10.21606/drs.2026.1184
Understanding power at the doorstep: Examining interpersonal power of smart doorbells through speculative design TU Delft, The Netherlands While Smart Home Surveillance Products (SHSPs), such as smart doorbell cameras, promise safety and convenience, they also reproduce asymmetrical power relations, privileging residents while exposing neighbours, visitors, and service workers to unconsented monitoring. Existing legal and technical responses focus on compliance and system design, yet overlook the interpersonal and affective dimensions of being watched. This paper presents a design-led inquiry into speculative re-imaginings of smart doorbells, aimed at surfacing and reflecting the hidden power dynamics embedded in everyday domestic interactions. We base this inquiry on an understanding of interpersonal power from the feminist theory of Matrix of Domination, allowing us to name three dimensions that facilitate power asymmetry: Awareness, Contestation and Care. We make a call for design to further explore smart home surveillance products not just as a systemic issue, but also as a lived experience of the power they facilitate. View Paper: https://doi.org/10.21606/drs.2026.938
From Edgeland to Gentrified-land: Graphic Communication as Intermediary for Negotiating Place Identity in Hackney Wick, London University of Southampton, United Kingdom Hackney Wick has long been regarded as an urban edgeland, marked by significant poverty since the 1860s, with distinctive topographic and socio- economic features. Yet in the early 2000s, it saw a rapid transformation into a creative space as artists began to occupy abandoned warehouses, building a live- work culture and quickly establishing itself as one of Europe’s most vibrant artistic communities. More recently, the development of the London Olympic infrastructure and government-led urban regeneration initiatives have accelerated gentrification and drive for social capital, whilst intensifying social exclusion and community marginalisation amongst disadvantaged communities. This paper integrates visual ethnography (graphic communication) and participatory methods (interviews) to unpack the transformation of place identity and reveal the social challenges driven by these changes. Finally, the paper reports on the community aspirations, offering insights for future design interventions and providing transferable knowledge applicable to other gentrifying urban contexts, particularly within London. View Paper: https://doi.org/10.21606/drs.2026.1932
Figurations as a situated counter-device for participatory design: Exploring time and presence in design practice. 1Independent researcher; 2University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA; 3Linnaeus University, Sweeden; 4Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colombia This article explores the notion of figurations as a theoretical and methodological concept to address tensions between time, presence, and practice in participatory design processes. Drawing on Donna Haraway’s and Rosi Braidotti’s work, we argue that figurations invite more situated practices that acknowledge the relational and material realities emerging in Global South contexts. Methodologically, the paper offers a situated ethnographic reading of participatory workshops conducted in Colombia, tracing the patterns and affections that shape collective action. We propose figurations as embodied, affective, and speculative counter-devices that foster political imagination and community agency in processes of social transformation. The paper contributes to current debates on decolonizing and situated design by positioning figurations as both analytical and generative concepts for re-imaging participation. View Paper: https://doi.org/10.21606/drs.2026.2132
Co-speculating future design research opportunities in community sharing with local sharing communities Univerisity of Edinburgh, United Kingdom Sharing communities challenge traditional models of ownership by allowing their members to temporarily access resources such as DIY tools, workshop spaces, and musical instruments. Although designers and design researchers have previously involved sharing communities in design, there are additional opportunities to engage sharing communities in speculating about their possible futures. This study invited 13 participants from various local sharing communities in Scotland to collaboratively speculate on how developments in technology, infrastructure, the economy, politics, and social and cultural aspects might influence their community sharing practices in the long term. By examining their future scenarios, we gain insight into the possible futures of community sharing and the opportunities for design and research. These include designing shared resources that support community values, amplifying community voices in public-sector design, creating infrastructure to connect communities, and fostering a sharing culture at the societal level. View Paper: https://doi.org/10.21606/drs.2026.2229
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