Description

Book Synopsis

This book brings together diverse voices from across the field of sustainable human computer interaction (SHCI) to discuss what it means for digital technology to support sustainability and how humans and technology can work together optimally for a more sustainable future.

Contemporary digital technologies are hailed by tech companies, governments and academics as leading-edge solutions to the challenges of environmental sustainability; smarter homes, more persuasive technologies, and a robust Internet of Things hold the promise for creating a greener world. Yet, deployments of interactive technologies for such purposes often lead to a paradox: they algorithmically optimize heating and lighting of houses without regard to the dynamics of daily life in the home; they can collect and display data that allow us to reflect on energy and emissions, yet the same information can cause us to raise our expectations for comfort and convenience; they might allow us to share best pr

Table of Contents

Photo Essay 1: Selfie Time

Eli Blevis

Introduction: Digital Technology and Sustainability: Engaging the paradox

Mike Hazas and Lisa P. Nathan

Photo Essay 2: Artifice and Nature

Eli Blevis

Part 1: Assessing the Field

Chapter 1: Three Principles of Sustainable Interaction Design, Revisited

David Roedl, William Odom and Eli Blevis

Chapter 2: Towards a Social Practice Theory Perspective on Sustainable HCI Research and Design

Adrian K. Clear and Rob Comber

Chapter 3: A Conversation Between Two Sustainable HCI Researchers: The role of HCI in a Positive Socio-Ecological Transformation

Samuel Mann and Oliver Bates

Response 1a: Sustainable HCI: From Individual to System

Chris Preist

Response 1b: Sustainability within HCI within Society: Improvisations, Interconnections and Imaginations

Janine Morley

Photo Essay 3: Rooftop Garden

Eli Blevis

Part 2: Addressing Limits

Chapter 4: Every Little Bit Makes Little Difference: The Paradox within SHCI

Somya Joshi and Tessy Cerratto Pargman

Chapter 5: Developing a political economy perspective for sustainable HCI

Bonnie Nardi and Hamid Ekbia

Chapter 6: Software Engineering for Sustainability: Tools for Sustainability Analysis

Birgit Penzenstadler and Colin C. Venters

Response 2: Challenging the Scope?

Enrico Constanza

Photo Essay 4: Classroom Exercise

Eli Blevis

PART 3: Ways To Engage With Others

Chapter 7: Communicating SHCI Research to Practitioners and Stakeholders

Christian Remy and Elaine M. Huang

Chapter 8: Negotiating and Engaging with Environmental Public Policy at Different Scales

Vanessa Thomas

Chapter 9: On the Inherent Contradictions of Teaching Sustainability at a Technical University

Elina Eriksson and Daniel Pargman

Chapter 10: Participation in Design for Sustainability

Janet Davis and Sandra Burri Gram-Hansen

Response 3a: Connected and Complicit

Mél Hogan

Response 3b: From Participatory Design to Participatory Governance through Sustainable HCI Rónán Kennedy

Photo Essay 5: Airstream

Eli Blevis

Part 4: Inspiring Futures

Chapter 11: A Sustainable Place: Everyday Designers as Place Makers

Audrey Desjardins, Xiaolan Wang, and Ron Wakkary

Chapter 12: Interaction Design for Sustainability Futures: Towards Worldmaking Interactions

Roy Bendor

Chapter 13: Think Local Act Local: The Case of Burning Man

a.m. tsaasan and Bonnie Nardi

Response 4: Sustainability Futures and the Future of Sustainable HCI

Yolande Strengers

Photo Essay 6: Locked Gate

Eli Blevis

Epilogue:

Mike Hazas and Lisa P. Nathan

Digital Technology and Sustainability

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    £45.59

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    RRP £47.99 – you save £2.40 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 26 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Mike Hazas, Lisa Nathan

    15 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Digital Technology and Sustainability by Mike Hazas

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 3/21/2019 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780367271169, 978-0367271169
      ISBN10: 0367271168

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book brings together diverse voices from across the field of sustainable human computer interaction (SHCI) to discuss what it means for digital technology to support sustainability and how humans and technology can work together optimally for a more sustainable future.

      Contemporary digital technologies are hailed by tech companies, governments and academics as leading-edge solutions to the challenges of environmental sustainability; smarter homes, more persuasive technologies, and a robust Internet of Things hold the promise for creating a greener world. Yet, deployments of interactive technologies for such purposes often lead to a paradox: they algorithmically optimize heating and lighting of houses without regard to the dynamics of daily life in the home; they can collect and display data that allow us to reflect on energy and emissions, yet the same information can cause us to raise our expectations for comfort and convenience; they might allow us to share best pr

      Table of Contents

      Photo Essay 1: Selfie Time

      Eli Blevis

      Introduction: Digital Technology and Sustainability: Engaging the paradox

      Mike Hazas and Lisa P. Nathan

      Photo Essay 2: Artifice and Nature

      Eli Blevis

      Part 1: Assessing the Field

      Chapter 1: Three Principles of Sustainable Interaction Design, Revisited

      David Roedl, William Odom and Eli Blevis

      Chapter 2: Towards a Social Practice Theory Perspective on Sustainable HCI Research and Design

      Adrian K. Clear and Rob Comber

      Chapter 3: A Conversation Between Two Sustainable HCI Researchers: The role of HCI in a Positive Socio-Ecological Transformation

      Samuel Mann and Oliver Bates

      Response 1a: Sustainable HCI: From Individual to System

      Chris Preist

      Response 1b: Sustainability within HCI within Society: Improvisations, Interconnections and Imaginations

      Janine Morley

      Photo Essay 3: Rooftop Garden

      Eli Blevis

      Part 2: Addressing Limits

      Chapter 4: Every Little Bit Makes Little Difference: The Paradox within SHCI

      Somya Joshi and Tessy Cerratto Pargman

      Chapter 5: Developing a political economy perspective for sustainable HCI

      Bonnie Nardi and Hamid Ekbia

      Chapter 6: Software Engineering for Sustainability: Tools for Sustainability Analysis

      Birgit Penzenstadler and Colin C. Venters

      Response 2: Challenging the Scope?

      Enrico Constanza

      Photo Essay 4: Classroom Exercise

      Eli Blevis

      PART 3: Ways To Engage With Others

      Chapter 7: Communicating SHCI Research to Practitioners and Stakeholders

      Christian Remy and Elaine M. Huang

      Chapter 8: Negotiating and Engaging with Environmental Public Policy at Different Scales

      Vanessa Thomas

      Chapter 9: On the Inherent Contradictions of Teaching Sustainability at a Technical University

      Elina Eriksson and Daniel Pargman

      Chapter 10: Participation in Design for Sustainability

      Janet Davis and Sandra Burri Gram-Hansen

      Response 3a: Connected and Complicit

      Mél Hogan

      Response 3b: From Participatory Design to Participatory Governance through Sustainable HCI Rónán Kennedy

      Photo Essay 5: Airstream

      Eli Blevis

      Part 4: Inspiring Futures

      Chapter 11: A Sustainable Place: Everyday Designers as Place Makers

      Audrey Desjardins, Xiaolan Wang, and Ron Wakkary

      Chapter 12: Interaction Design for Sustainability Futures: Towards Worldmaking Interactions

      Roy Bendor

      Chapter 13: Think Local Act Local: The Case of Burning Man

      a.m. tsaasan and Bonnie Nardi

      Response 4: Sustainability Futures and the Future of Sustainable HCI

      Yolande Strengers

      Photo Essay 6: Locked Gate

      Eli Blevis

      Epilogue:

      Mike Hazas and Lisa P. Nathan

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