Towards a Research Agenda for Geopolitical Tensions in HCI

Author:

Abdelnour Nocera José12ORCID,Clemmensen Torkil3ORCID,van Biljon Judy4,Kroeze Jan H4,Qin Xiangang5ORCID,Parra-Agudelo Leonardo6

Affiliation:

1. University of West London School of Computing and Engineering, , St Mary's Road, London, W5 5RF, UK

2. ITI/LARSyS , Polo Científico e Tecnológico da Madeira, Caminho da Penteada, piso -2 9020-105 Funchal, Portugal

3. Copenhagen Business School , Howitzvej 60, 4.11, Frederiksberg, 2000, Denmark

4. University of South Africa (Science Campus) School of Computing, , Christiaan de Wet Road, Roodepoort, Johannesburg, 1710, South Africa

5. Beijing University of Posts & Telecommunications Department of Design, , No 10, Xitucheng Road, Haidian District, 100876, Beijing, P.R. of China

6. University of los Andes Department of Design, , Cra. 1 #18a-12, Bogota, Colombia

Abstract

Abstract There are major geopolitical challenges for human-computer interaction (HCI): there may be little or no global HCI knowledge with a shared approach and identity; Western HCI theory and methods may not be adequate for regional or local models of education and practice; and the global organization of HCI research communities may be biased. This article explores geopolitical tensions in HCI research and practice fields. In particular, it offers an action-oriented framework to support systematic analysis and comparison of what HCI, as a field of knowledge and practice, is in different geopolitical contexts. We use activity theory combined with the knowledge mobilization framework to develop an actionable comparative analysis framework of geopolitical HCI challenges. The proposed framework is demonstrated by using it to analyse geopolitical HCI tensions in three case studies: the first one is focused on cultural and ideological issues surrounding the introduction of global HCI curricula in South Africa; the second one documents how local design practices in China are undermined by foreign narratives of the value of global HCI knowledge; and the third one offers an account of how global HCI could stimulate subversive local action in Colombia. The discussion takes up HCI tensions within and across countries, proposes a research agenda for geopolitical HCI research and presents theoretical contributions to activity theory and knowledge mobilization approaches. The conclusion answers research questions derived from the above challenges and summarizes how our framework and research agenda can be used to identify and assess geopolitical tensions in HCI ensuring diversity and pluralism in the field.

Funder

Research Professor Support Programme of the University of South Africa

National Research Foundation of South Africa

South African Research Chairs Initiative of the Department of Science and Technology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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