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Governing with Nature: Applying More-than-Human Design to the Management of Shared Urban Green Space

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Governing with Nature: Applying More-than-Human Design to the Management of Shared Urban Green Space. / Sacks, Justin; Coulton, Paul; Galabo, Rosendy.
[ ] With Design: Reinventing Design Modes. Singapore: Springer, 2022.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNAbstract

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Sacks J, Coulton P, Galabo R. Governing with Nature: Applying More-than-Human Design to the Management of Shared Urban Green Space. In [ ] With Design: Reinventing Design Modes. Singapore: Springer. 2022 doi: 10.1007/978-981-19-4472-7_250

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Bibtex

@inbook{63fbe1442aac4082b9db28def0b880e8,
title = "Governing with Nature: Applying More-than-Human Design to the Management of Shared Urban Green Space",
abstract = "A commons refers to a shared resource that is governed by a community of people, in contrast with a resource managed by a private company or public agency. The commons literature offers robust and respected frameworks for understanding how a community manages a commons. However, decolonization critiques in the commons field identify the need to account for other ontologies when we think about what constitutes a community. A recurring theme, particularly in indigenous ontologies, is the location of humans as part of nature rather than separate from nature. What does it mean to govern a shared resource as a more-than-human community? The workshop will draw on real world scenarios about the management of urban green space. The aim of the workshop is to understand how people design governance rules for a shared resource like urban green space when asked to incorporate nonhuman species as equal actants. Workshop participants interested in the following topics will find this workshop helpful: emerging issues in codesign and participatory design research, design as political work that challenges mainstream capitalist economics, and exploring the role of nonhuman species in design. Participants do not need a background in any of these fields. The workshop will spend significant time in the first part of the workshop creating a shared grounding in theoretical issues regarding the commons. Workshop participants can therefore expect to gain an understanding of several emerging design research approaches, including the commons and more-than-human design.",
keywords = "Commons, Communing, More-than-human design, Pluriversal Design",
author = "Justin Sacks and Paul Coulton and Rosendy Galabo",
year = "2022",
month = nov,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1007/978-981-19-4472-7_250",
language = "English",
isbn = "9789811944710",
booktitle = "[ ] With Design",
publisher = "Springer",
note = "IASDR 2021, IASDR 2021 ; Conference date: 05-12-2021 Through 09-12-2021",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Governing with Nature

T2 - IASDR 2021

AU - Sacks, Justin

AU - Coulton, Paul

AU - Galabo, Rosendy

PY - 2022/11/6

Y1 - 2022/11/6

N2 - A commons refers to a shared resource that is governed by a community of people, in contrast with a resource managed by a private company or public agency. The commons literature offers robust and respected frameworks for understanding how a community manages a commons. However, decolonization critiques in the commons field identify the need to account for other ontologies when we think about what constitutes a community. A recurring theme, particularly in indigenous ontologies, is the location of humans as part of nature rather than separate from nature. What does it mean to govern a shared resource as a more-than-human community? The workshop will draw on real world scenarios about the management of urban green space. The aim of the workshop is to understand how people design governance rules for a shared resource like urban green space when asked to incorporate nonhuman species as equal actants. Workshop participants interested in the following topics will find this workshop helpful: emerging issues in codesign and participatory design research, design as political work that challenges mainstream capitalist economics, and exploring the role of nonhuman species in design. Participants do not need a background in any of these fields. The workshop will spend significant time in the first part of the workshop creating a shared grounding in theoretical issues regarding the commons. Workshop participants can therefore expect to gain an understanding of several emerging design research approaches, including the commons and more-than-human design.

AB - A commons refers to a shared resource that is governed by a community of people, in contrast with a resource managed by a private company or public agency. The commons literature offers robust and respected frameworks for understanding how a community manages a commons. However, decolonization critiques in the commons field identify the need to account for other ontologies when we think about what constitutes a community. A recurring theme, particularly in indigenous ontologies, is the location of humans as part of nature rather than separate from nature. What does it mean to govern a shared resource as a more-than-human community? The workshop will draw on real world scenarios about the management of urban green space. The aim of the workshop is to understand how people design governance rules for a shared resource like urban green space when asked to incorporate nonhuman species as equal actants. Workshop participants interested in the following topics will find this workshop helpful: emerging issues in codesign and participatory design research, design as political work that challenges mainstream capitalist economics, and exploring the role of nonhuman species in design. Participants do not need a background in any of these fields. The workshop will spend significant time in the first part of the workshop creating a shared grounding in theoretical issues regarding the commons. Workshop participants can therefore expect to gain an understanding of several emerging design research approaches, including the commons and more-than-human design.

KW - Commons

KW - Communing

KW - More-than-human design

KW - Pluriversal Design

U2 - 10.1007/978-981-19-4472-7_250

DO - 10.1007/978-981-19-4472-7_250

M3 - Abstract

SN - 9789811944710

BT - [ ] With Design

PB - Springer

CY - Singapore

Y2 - 5 December 2021 through 9 December 2021

ER -