Start Date
Immediate
Expiry Date
03 Oct, 25
Salary
2.901
Posted On
04 Jul, 25
Experience
0 year(s) or above
Remote Job
Yes
Telecommute
Yes
Sponsor Visa
No
Skills
Writing, Research, Urban Design, Citizen Engagement, Human Computer Interaction, Interaction Design, Design, Participation, Architecture, Interdisciplinary Research, Democracy, Participatory Design
Industry
Information Technology/IT
JOB DESCRIPTION
Local governments need to collaborate with residents in shaping urban futures that are just, liveable, and inclusive to all living species. On the other hand, citizens start their own initiatives to address local issues. Many contemporary societal challenges, for example the climate crisis, the fast emergence of AI, or the devastating loss of biodiversity, are so-called wicked problems. Such problems are characterised by their dynamic nature, have multiple problem owners, and do not have one straightforward solution. Co-design, the practice of collaborating and making together, is considered as a suitable approach to dealing with wicked problems. As a result, local governments increasingly draw from this practice when engaging with citizens.
However, enabling a genuine collaborative process in true partnership with residents is not easy. Digital technology opens new ways for residents to be engaged, for example through VR, AR, digital twins, and citizen participation apps. This PhD project will explore how residents and local governments through co-design effectively shape just, liveable, and inclusive urban futures.
Within this broader theme, you can define your problem statement. Examples of topics and questions that you may address:
You will explore these topics and questions from a Participatory Design perspective and develop a systematic approach to untangle co-design practices in shaping urban futures. You will engage with, draw from, and integrate multiple scientific disciplines, for example human-computer interaction, urban studies, sociology, design, urban planning, and public administration. Through a critical analysis, you will seek new theoretical and conceptual insights into how contemporary urban co-design practices contribute or potentially hinder just, liveable, and inclusive cities. You will apply, evaluate and assess existing toolkits and processes, to create recommendations for local governments and residents on how to effectively shape just urban futures together.
The successful candidates will join the Urban Studies section at the Department of Urbanism in the Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment. Consisting of a group of highly interdisciplinary scholars, the section studies the interactions between people and their social and built environments, and the effects of urban design on their behaviour.
JOB REQUIREMENTS
Please refer the Job description for details