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Exploring Respectful Design Directions for Indigenous Communities

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Exploring Respectful Design Directions for Indigenous Communities. / Reitsma, L.; Wallace, Jayne; Rodgers, P.
Proceedings - 2013 International Conference on Culture and Computing: Culture and Computing 2013. IEEE, 2013. p. 131-132.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Reitsma, L, Wallace, J & Rodgers, P 2013, Exploring Respectful Design Directions for Indigenous Communities. in Proceedings - 2013 International Conference on Culture and Computing: Culture and Computing 2013. IEEE, pp. 131-132. https://doi.org/10.1109/CultureComputing.2013.31

APA

Reitsma, L., Wallace, J., & Rodgers, P. (2013). Exploring Respectful Design Directions for Indigenous Communities. In Proceedings - 2013 International Conference on Culture and Computing: Culture and Computing 2013 (pp. 131-132). IEEE. https://doi.org/10.1109/CultureComputing.2013.31

Vancouver

Reitsma L, Wallace J, Rodgers P. Exploring Respectful Design Directions for Indigenous Communities. In Proceedings - 2013 International Conference on Culture and Computing: Culture and Computing 2013. IEEE. 2013. p. 131-132 doi: 10.1109/CultureComputing.2013.31

Author

Reitsma, L. ; Wallace, Jayne ; Rodgers, P. / Exploring Respectful Design Directions for Indigenous Communities. Proceedings - 2013 International Conference on Culture and Computing: Culture and Computing 2013. IEEE, 2013. pp. 131-132

Bibtex

@inproceedings{962207f6f5f94595ad9f0cf452f1a429,
title = "Exploring Respectful Design Directions for Indigenous Communities",
abstract = "Projects focusing on preserving cultural heritage are most usually instigated by a researcher. Yet, the question arises 'whether such projects are beneficial for the studied communities?' This paper describes the first part of a co-reflective, design research case study exploring through design the dynamics of the disappearance of culture heritage. By guidelines for respectful design (synthesized from literature) we sought to find an indigenous community to work with and a design direction beneficial for them. Our initial visits to three indigenous communities in Malaysia, where we developed and introduced empathic design probes, led to the Penan community becoming particularly interested in the project. A design direction arose, which aimed to explore technological design as a means to spark intergenerational conversations on being a Penan.",
author = "L. Reitsma and Jayne Wallace and P. Rodgers",
year = "2013",
month = sep,
day = "18",
doi = "10.1109/CultureComputing.2013.31",
language = "English",
pages = "131--132",
booktitle = "Proceedings - 2013 International Conference on Culture and Computing",
publisher = "IEEE",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Exploring Respectful Design Directions for Indigenous Communities

AU - Reitsma, L.

AU - Wallace, Jayne

AU - Rodgers, P.

PY - 2013/9/18

Y1 - 2013/9/18

N2 - Projects focusing on preserving cultural heritage are most usually instigated by a researcher. Yet, the question arises 'whether such projects are beneficial for the studied communities?' This paper describes the first part of a co-reflective, design research case study exploring through design the dynamics of the disappearance of culture heritage. By guidelines for respectful design (synthesized from literature) we sought to find an indigenous community to work with and a design direction beneficial for them. Our initial visits to three indigenous communities in Malaysia, where we developed and introduced empathic design probes, led to the Penan community becoming particularly interested in the project. A design direction arose, which aimed to explore technological design as a means to spark intergenerational conversations on being a Penan.

AB - Projects focusing on preserving cultural heritage are most usually instigated by a researcher. Yet, the question arises 'whether such projects are beneficial for the studied communities?' This paper describes the first part of a co-reflective, design research case study exploring through design the dynamics of the disappearance of culture heritage. By guidelines for respectful design (synthesized from literature) we sought to find an indigenous community to work with and a design direction beneficial for them. Our initial visits to three indigenous communities in Malaysia, where we developed and introduced empathic design probes, led to the Penan community becoming particularly interested in the project. A design direction arose, which aimed to explore technological design as a means to spark intergenerational conversations on being a Penan.

U2 - 10.1109/CultureComputing.2013.31

DO - 10.1109/CultureComputing.2013.31

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SP - 131

EP - 132

BT - Proceedings - 2013 International Conference on Culture and Computing

PB - IEEE

ER -