The Design of Pseudo-Participation

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Abstract

Participation is key to building an equitable, realistic and democratic future. Yet a lack of agency in decision making and agenda-setting is a growing phenomenon in the design of digital public services. We call this pseudo-participation by and in design. The configuration of digital artifacts and/or processes can provide an illusion of participation but lack supportive processes and affordances to allow meaningful participation to happen. This exploratory paper examines the realm of pseudo-participation in the design of public digital services through two concepts: 1) pseudo-participation by design, digital interfaces, and tools that provide the illusion of participation to the people, 2) pseudo-participation in design, processes in which those affected by the design decisions are marginalized and not given any agency. We contribute to the re-imagination of participatory design in modern societies where the role of politics has become ubiquitous and is yet to be critically scrutinized by designers.

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Palacin, V., Nelimarkka, M., Reynolds-Cuellar, P., & Becker, C. (2020). The Design of Pseudo-Participation. In ACM International Conference Proceeding Series (Vol. 2, pp. 40–44). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3384772.3385141

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