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Event

Participatory Design Conference (PDC) 2022

The Participatory Design Conference (PDC) is a leading venue for research on the direct involvement of people in the design, development, implementation and appropriation of technologies, artefacts and services.

The Participatory Design Conference (PDC) is a leading venue for research on the direct involvement of people in the design, development, implementation and appropriation of technologies, artefacts and services. PDC brings together a multidisciplinary and international group of researchers and practitioners encompassing a wide range of issues that emerge around participatory design, encountered and discussed in multiple fields and disciplines.

2022 will see the 17th edition of the PDC conference, which is being “hosted” by Newcastle University in Newcastle upon Tyne in the United Kingdom, in collaboration with the University of Edinburgh (Institute for Design Informatics) and RMIT. With ongoing uncertainties due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and with a desire to make PDC more inclusive while reducing its carbon footprint, the 2022 conference will have a radically different format from previous conferences. While PDC 2022 will run a conference event in Newcastle upon Tyne between 30th August and 1st September 2022 (COVID-19 permitting), it will interface with a number of international PDC Places – smaller in-person events and activities ran in different locations around the world – with each Place shaped and organised by local participatory design researchers and practitioners. These will be supplimented by an online conference programme between the 19th and 26th of August, engaging PDC participants in activities in advance of the in-person events and enabling those unable to travel to a physical event to still take part in PDC 2022.

The theme for the 2022 conference is Embracing Cosmologies: Expanding Worlds of Participatory Design, building on the themes of the last editions of the conference that have drawn attention to the wider political, systemic and pluralistic qualities of participatory design research and practice. Democratic and socially just practices of design have always foregrounded people as agents of socio-political change. In more recent years a growing recognition of other forms of participation beyond the human have emerged. These include participation not only from technological entities, such as AI and algorithms, but also participation with biophysical, ecological, and spiritual worlds. How we design equitably with these prescient entities is increasingly of concern for many participatory designers and researchers seeking to have meaningful impact

See the conference website for more information.


Zoom and Newcastle upon Tyne, UK