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Walking, recording and collaborative mapping: how can we advance PD methodology by engaging with heritage?

Published: 20 August 2018 Publication History

Abstract

The aim of this workshop is to implement and evaluate an approach to transdisciplinary interaction, designed to address spatial planning in an inclusive manner. We propose to engage participants from different fields in an exercise of walking, recording and mapping as one combined participatory design (PD) methodology. Specifically, we reflect on the possibilities of pluralizing approaches to heritage making, by looking at how PD methodologies could be applied in this field. The workshop takes form as a participatory walking and data-collecting exercise with the finality to reflect on how creative processes that feed into fields determined by expert discourses, such as heritage making policies, could be enriched with the tools and methodologies of PD. Discussions about heritage are increasingly crucial to contemporary politics of remembrance and memorialization, which often intersect with wider political discussions on urban inclusion and diversity. Accordingly, and considering the main theme of the PDC 2018 conference, the workshop aims to foster a critical dialogue on how PD methodologies can support the creation of more inclusive urban environments that celebrate diversity and facilitate the development of alternative approaches to the making of heritage. During the workshop, the multidisciplinary approach to challenge and break into dominant institutionalized discourses is tested, discussed and refined. Moreover, we establish how this methodology could be implemented in response to wider concerns of PD and spatial planning.

References

[1]
David Lowenthal. 1998. The Heritage Crusade and the Spoils of History. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
[2]
Laurajane Smith. 2006. Uses of Heritage. Routledge, London.
[3]
Directorate-General for Research and Innovation. 2015. Getting Cultural Heritage to Work for Europe: Report of the Horizon 2020 Expert Group on Cultural Heritage. European Commission, Brussels.
[4]
G. J. Ashworth, Brian Graham and J. E. Tunbridge. 2007. Pluralising Pasts. Heritage, Identity and Place in Multicultural Societies. Pluto Press, London.
[5]
Council of Europe. 2005. Council of Europe Framework Convention on the Value of Cultural Heritage for Society Faro, 27.X.2005. Council of Europe Treaty Series no. 199, Strasbourg.
[6]
John Scofield (ed.). 2014. Who Needs Experts? Counter-Mapping Cultural Heritage. Routledge, London.
[7]
Graham Fairclough. 2014. What Was Wrong With Dufton? Reflections on Counter-Mapping: Self, Alterity and Community. In Who Needs Experts? Counter-Mapping Cultural Heritage. John Scofield (ed.). Routledge, London, 241--248: 247.
[8]
Liesbeth Huybrechts and Marijn van de Weijer. 2017. Constructing publics as a key to doctoral research: A discussion of two PhD projects engaging in societal issues with artistic and design-based methods. In Perspectives on Research Assessment in Architecture, Music and the Arts: Discussing Doctorateness. Fredrik Nilsson, Halina Dunin-Woyseth and Nel Janssens (eds.). Routledge, London, 129--144.

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  • (2021)Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence for Designing Accessible Cultural HeritageApplied Sciences10.3390/app1102087011:2(870)Online publication date: 19-Jan-2021

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  1. Walking, recording and collaborative mapping: how can we advance PD methodology by engaging with heritage?

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    cover image ACM Other conferences
    PDC '18: Proceedings of the 15th Participatory Design Conference: Short Papers, Situated Actions, Workshops and Tutorial - Volume 2
    August 2018
    230 pages
    ISBN:9781450355742
    DOI:10.1145/3210604
    Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than the author(s) must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected].

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    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 20 August 2018

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    Author Tags

    1. heritage
    2. interdisciplinarity
    3. mutual learning
    4. visualization

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    PDC '18
    PDC '18: Participatory Design Conference 2018
    August 20 - 24, 2018
    Hasselt and Genk, Belgium

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    Overall Acceptance Rate 49 of 289 submissions, 17%

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    • (2021)Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence for Designing Accessible Cultural HeritageApplied Sciences10.3390/app1102087011:2(870)Online publication date: 19-Jan-2021

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