Colabo.Space - Participatory Platform for Evolving Research and Publishing Workflows

2021 ◽  
pp. 112-117
Author(s):  
Sasha Mile Rudan ◽  
Sinisha Rudan ◽  
Eugenia Kelbert ◽  
Andrija Sagic ◽  
Lazar Kovacevic ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 214 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Buckingham Shum ◽  
K. Aberer ◽  
A. Schmidt ◽  
S. Bishop ◽  
P. Lukowicz ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 101-116
Author(s):  
Won No ◽  
Laurie Mook ◽  
Daniel Schugurensky

Author(s):  
Bodil Marie Stavning Thomsen

This article studies Nagieb Khaja’s documentary film My Afghanistan. Life in the Forbidden Zone (2012), produced from footage by locals. It is Khaja’s aim to create awareness of how daily life is maintained in a war zone in Afghanistan. In 2013 he launched a webpage to further the interest in the matter. News on the withdrawal of military forces and interviews with locals were posted on the site, which was used as an educational participatory platform. This article highlights the participatory engagement by including the Deleuzian concept of ‘the intercessor’ – i.e. the use of the film camera as a creative rather than a documenting device – and it contends that the intuitive use of the camera momentarily has a participatory impact on the users and an affective impact on spectators and users alike.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 210-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa Swist ◽  
Liam Magee ◽  
Judy Phuong ◽  
David Sweeting

Kolorob is a participatory platform connecting informal settlement communities with services and informal jobs in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Alongside technological systems, expertise from community, non-government, private-sector, volunteer and academic fields has been integral to the platform’s development. These socio-technical connections and networks, manifest through participatory design, agile software development and collaborative knowledge practices, have become productively entangled in the labour of platform production. We introduce a framework, participatory platform analysis, through which distinct layers – in the form of audiences, intermediaries, interfaces and databases – of this labour can be distinguished and examined. Our analysis draws upon focus group discussions, conducted in Mirpur in 2016 with emergent experts: youth facilitators, field officers and developers. We argue that the interests and tensions of co-designing participatory platforms relating to matters of public concern in South Asian mega-cities are reflective of the rising hybridity of expertise, generated through both institutional training and grass-roots practice, in contemporary urban life. The ‘narrative of expertise in the future’ compels us to recode knowledge production in the here and now: how we are making participatory platforms, the role of socio-technical expertise and the labour of communicating publics.


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