Amplifying Relationships through Place and Locality in the Design of Local Government Digital Services

This paper presents an action research service design project that took place as part of the Public Collaboration Lab (PCL), a one-year, AHRC funded research project between Camden Council and Central Saint Martins (CSM), University of the Arts London. The project focused on the Council’s Home Libra...

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Main Author: Alison Prendiville
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-01-01
Series:She Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics and Innovation
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405872617300102
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spelling doaj-52b3347e73314bbc9d9f62cbab8fbe3e2020-11-25T01:18:35ZengElsevierShe Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics and Innovation2405-87262018-01-01414759Amplifying Relationships through Place and Locality in the Design of Local Government Digital ServicesAlison Prendiville0Corresponding author; LCC, University of the Arts London, UKThis paper presents an action research service design project that took place as part of the Public Collaboration Lab (PCL), a one-year, AHRC funded research project between Camden Council and Central Saint Martins (CSM), University of the Arts London. The project focused on the Council’s Home Library Service (HLS). With UK central government reducing budgets for local authorities, and increasing pressure from societal challenges including an ageing population, the HLS offered a speculative design space to reconfigure possible co-designed service futures. Visual ethnographic processes, framed within anthropological concepts of locality and place, traced the routes travelled and the interactions that were enacted between the HLS team members and its housebound readers, revealing the hidden nature of the relationships and knowledge that existed across the borough. I conclude that as governments look to reconfigure services—and often do so using abstract policy language—new frames of understanding of locality and place must be explored to deliver digital solutions that amplify the social and cultural dimensions that constitute a community. Keywords: Service design, Design anthropology, Digital anthropology, Local government services, Social innovationhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405872617300102
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alison Prendiville
spellingShingle Alison Prendiville
Amplifying Relationships through Place and Locality in the Design of Local Government Digital Services
She Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics and Innovation
author_facet Alison Prendiville
author_sort Alison Prendiville
title Amplifying Relationships through Place and Locality in the Design of Local Government Digital Services
title_short Amplifying Relationships through Place and Locality in the Design of Local Government Digital Services
title_full Amplifying Relationships through Place and Locality in the Design of Local Government Digital Services
title_fullStr Amplifying Relationships through Place and Locality in the Design of Local Government Digital Services
title_full_unstemmed Amplifying Relationships through Place and Locality in the Design of Local Government Digital Services
title_sort amplifying relationships through place and locality in the design of local government digital services
publisher Elsevier
series She Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics and Innovation
issn 2405-8726
publishDate 2018-01-01
description This paper presents an action research service design project that took place as part of the Public Collaboration Lab (PCL), a one-year, AHRC funded research project between Camden Council and Central Saint Martins (CSM), University of the Arts London. The project focused on the Council’s Home Library Service (HLS). With UK central government reducing budgets for local authorities, and increasing pressure from societal challenges including an ageing population, the HLS offered a speculative design space to reconfigure possible co-designed service futures. Visual ethnographic processes, framed within anthropological concepts of locality and place, traced the routes travelled and the interactions that were enacted between the HLS team members and its housebound readers, revealing the hidden nature of the relationships and knowledge that existed across the borough. I conclude that as governments look to reconfigure services—and often do so using abstract policy language—new frames of understanding of locality and place must be explored to deliver digital solutions that amplify the social and cultural dimensions that constitute a community. Keywords: Service design, Design anthropology, Digital anthropology, Local government services, Social innovation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405872617300102
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