Colaboradores
Shaowen Bardzell is an associate professor in the
School of Informatics, Informática, and Engineering
at Indiana University. A common thread throughout
her work is the exploration of the contributions
of design, feminism, and social science to support
technology’s role in social change. She is the
co-editor of Critical Theory and Interaction Design
(CON prensa, in press) and co-author of Humanistic
HCI (morgan & Claypool, 2015).
Andreas Birkbak is an assistant professor in the
Techno-Anthropology Research Group at Aalborg
Universidad (AAU) in Copenhagen. His research
is on digital methods and democracy, drawing on
science and technology studies. Andreas holds a
PhD in Techno-Anthropology (AAU), an MSc in
Social Science of the Internet (Oxford), and an
MSc+BSc in Sociology (Universidad de Copenhague).
Jaz Hee-jeong Choi is a vice-chancellor’s senior
research fellow at the Digital Ethnography Research
Centre and Design & Creative Practice ECP at
RMIT and the founding chair of SIGCHI FoodCHI.
Previously, she was the director of the QUT Urban
Informatics Research Lab. Her current research
explores designing novel technologies and services
for care across self-care and mutual aid, social entre-
preneurship, and co-creative urban transformation.
Carl DiSalvo is an associate professor in the
School of Literature, Media and Communication
at the Georgia Institute of Technology. At Georgia
Tech he directs the Public Design Workshop: a design
research studio that explores socially-engaged design
and civic media. He is also a co-editor of the MIT
Press journal Design Issues. DiSalvo’s scholarship
draws together theories and methods from design
research and design studies, the social sciences and
the humanities, to analyze the social and political
qualities of design, and to prototype experimental
systems and services. DiSalvo holds a PhD in Design
from Carnegie Mellon University (2006).
Katrien Dreessen is a researcher at the Social
Spaces research group (research unit ‘Inter-Actions,'
LUCA, school of arts/KULeuven) and teacher at
LUCA, School of Arts in Genk. Actualmente, she is
involved in several projects situated on the inter-
section of design research, healthcare, and open
producción. She is also conducting her PhD research
on the idea of infrastructuring in FabLabs or how
long-term participation of groups other than the
traditional makers (es decir., non-expert users) in these
open makerspaces can be stimulated and achieved.
katrien.dreessen@luca-arts.be
Laura Forlano is an associate professor of Design
at the Institute of Design and Affiliated Faculty
in the College of Architecture at Illinois Institute of
Technology where she is director of the Critical
Futures Lab. Forlano’s research is focused on the
aesthetics and politics at the intersection between
design and emerging technologies. She is co-editor
with Marcus Foth, Christine Satchell, and Martin
Gibbs of From Social Butterfly to Engaged Citizen (CON
Prensa 2011). She received her PhD in communications
from Columbia University.
Ben Hagenaars is a designer and researcher at the
research group Social Spaces from the LUCA School
of arts. He graduated as a product designer from the
MAD-faculty in Genk. After his studies, he started
several design projects that focused on sustainability,
which ultimately led to his PhD (2011). dentro del
framework of his PhD, he experimented with several
design tools and strategies to engage participants in
designing scenarios for complex sustainability issues.
He also translated the design strategies to courses,
which he teaches at the LUCA School of arts in Genk.
ben.hagenaars@luca-arts.be
Karin Hansson is an artist and researcher at The
Royal Institute of Arts in Stockholm and a docent
in Computer and Systems Sciences at Stockholm
Universidad. Through a practice-based research
approach she has explored the norms and values
embedded in the systems and aesthetics of the design.
She has written extensively about technology-based
participation from a critical design perspective,
contributing to diverse research areas, such as urban
planificación, arts sociology, and crisis informatics.
110
Problemas de diseño: Volumen 34, Número 4 Otoño 2018
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James W. Malazita is an assistant professor of Science
& Technology Studies (STS) and Games & Simulation
Arts & Ciencias (GSAS) at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in Troy, Nueva York. He studies the political
practices enmeshed with interactive media, digital
design tools, and digital-material interfaces. Malazita
works to develop Humanities design platforms that
can support alternative sociotechnical worlds. Su
research and teaching have been supported by the
National Endowment for the Humanities, the Popular
Culture Association, the New Jersey Historical
Commission, and Red Hat Inc.
Annapurna Mamidipudi was trained as an engineer
before she set-up and worked over 15 years in an NGO
that supported vulnerable craft livelihoods. ella era
an awardee of the Global Social Business Incubator
program of Santa Clara University (2009) for this
trabajar. En 2016, Mamidipudi completed her doctoral
thesis titled “Towards a theory of innovation for
handloom weaving in India” at the University of
Maastricht, where she studied handloom weaving
as sustainable socio-technology. She is currently a
visiting fellow at the Max Plank Institute for the
History of Science. Her research interests include
the study of traditional craft in the contemporary
world, particularly handloom weaving as livelihood,
socio-technology, and knowledge; sustainable agri-
cultura, politics of development, and the role of
markets in sustaining traditional arts and crafts.
Teresa Cerratto Pargman is an Associate Professor
of HCI and Head of the Interaction Design and
Learning Research unit at Stockholm University.
She is currently working with design issues at the
intersection of civic participation, mobile apps,
and social media analytics.
Paolo Patelli is an architect and a researcher. Él
engages critically with space, things and society,
through design, academic and artistic research.
He is currently Associate Reader (Lector) “Places
and Traces” at Design Academy Eindhoven.
Liesbeth Huybrechts is an associate professor in
the area of Participatory Design, Human-Computer
Interaction and spatial transformation processes in
the research group Arck, University of Hasselt. Ella es
involved in the Living Lab The Other Market (https://
deanderemarkt.be/), a space for reflection and action
on the future of work. She is also part of the research
projects Traders and Critical Heritage dealing with
Participatory Design and (Heritage in) Public Space
(Marie Curie ITN, www.tr-aders.eu). Together with
Thomas Laureyssens, Liesbeth designed the frequent-
ly used participatory mapping tool MAP-it (www.
map-it.be ). As a freelancer, she is active in exhibitions,
workshops and writing. She has taught in the Social
Design Masters, Design Academy Eindhoven in the
Interaction Design Department (LUCA, KULeuven).
She co-founded the research group Social Spaces
(www.socialspaces.be) exploring the social qualities
of design and art.
Tobias Bornakke Jørgensen holds a PhD in Sociology
from Copenhagen University and comes from a
dual background in Computer Science and Sociology.
The majority of Jørgensen’s research explores the role
of digital data in today’s knowledge production.
Jørgensen is founding partner in the cooperative
research agency Analysis & Numbers, cual
specializes in the design of novel digital measures.
Somya Joshi is an associate professor in Human
Computer Interaction at Stockholm University.
Her area of specialization intersects the fields of
Sustainability and Participatory Decision Making,
in which innovative technological tools and practices
mediate sustainable development.
Silvia Lindtner is an assistant professor at the
University of Michigan in the School of Information,
with a courtesy appointment in the Penny W. Stamps
School of Art and Design. Lindtner’s research and
teaching interests include innovation and technology
entrepreneurship; making and hacking cultures;
and shifts in digital work, labor, industria, política,
and governance. This work unfolds through a deep
engagement with issues of gender, inequality, y
enactments of masculinity in engineering and
computer science fields; politics and transnational
imaginaries of design; contemporary political
economía; and processes of economization. Su
research has been awarded support from the US
Fundación Nacional de Ciencia, IMLS, Intel Labs,
Google Anita Borg, and the Chinese National
Natural Science Foundation.
Problemas de diseño: Volumen 34, Número 4 Otoño 2018
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Cigdem Kaya Pazarbasi is a designer and associate
professor at Istanbul Technical University (ITU)
Department of Industrial Product Design, dónde
she teaches interaction between art and design and
product design Studio in the undergraduate program,
and practice-led research methods and design for
social innovation in the graduate programs. Su
experience as an artist enriches her teaching in the
design programs. She received her BSc in ID from
ITU, Istanbul; her MFA in New Genres from SFAI,
San Francisco; and her PhD in ID from ITU, Istanbul.
Cigdem has been a visiting researcher at Sheffield
Hallam University and she is a Fulbright alumna.
Paola Pierri has more than 15 years of experience
working in the social sector across issues of social
justice, diversity, and social inclusion. She is currently
working as Lecturer at the University of the Arts
Londres, where she is also undertaking a doctoral
program in design anthropology. She collaborates
with other academic institutions in Berlin. Como un
practitioner, she works on different projects exploring
the politics of participation.
Morten Krogh Petersen works as a senior consultant
at Gemeinschaft, an anthropological agency special-
izing in city development. In his previous academic
appointment at Aalborg University Copenhagen as
associate professor, his focus was on ethnographic
studies of design and innovation practices. He has
published in Valuation Studies, Ethnologia Europaea,
and Science Studies.
Tanja Rosenqvist is a designer and recent PhD
graduate from the Institute for Sustainable Futures
at the University of Technology Sydney. Su investigacion
is transdisciplinary and sits in the intersection
between design, international development and
governance. In her activist doctoral research project
“Governing Futures—Voices and Wastewater,” she
explored the governance of urban sanitation services
in Indonesia and used design as a means of engaging
low-income urban communities and government
representatives in exploring and questioning current
government relations and the societal norms and
values underpinning them. The project sought to
create change in sanitation governance in Indonesia
and was inspired by Participatory Design, Diseño
Activism, and Mundane Governance.
Giuditta Vendrame is a designer and researcher
based in the Netherlands. She explores the inter-
sections between design, art practice and legal
sistemas. Her work questions the opaque nature of
law through film, performance and installations.
Otto von Busch is an associate professor of Integrated
Design at Parsons, The New School for Design. Él
holds a PhD in design from the School of Design
and Craft at the University of Gothenburg, Suecia,
and was previously Professor of Textiles at Konstfack,
Stockholm. His work explores how design can mobi-
lize community capabilities through collaborative
craft, moda, and social activism.
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Problemas de diseño: Volumen 34, Número 4 Otoño 2018
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