HCI and UN's Sustainable Development Goals (original) (raw)

A Decade of Sustainable HCI

Proceedings of the 2021 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

Sustainable HCI (SHCI) constitutes a relatively new research field within HCI. We have identified four literature reviews of the field conducted between 2009-2014. In this paper, we present and discuss the results of a systematic literature review of peer-reviewed conference and journal articles that have been published in the field during the last ten years (2010-2019). To this end, we apply the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as a framework to classify and discern high-level goals SHCI researchers have worked towards during this period. This paper contributes to HCI by 1) identifying Sustainable Development Goals that SHCI researchers have worked towards, 2) discerning main research trends in the field during the last decade, 3) using the SDG framework generatively to enumerate and reflect on areas that this far have not been covered by SHCI research and 4) presenting takeaways and opportunities for further research by the larger HCI community. CCS CONCEPTS • General and reference → Surveys and overviews; • Social and professional topics → Sustainability; • Human-centered computing → Human computer interaction (HCI); HCI theory, concepts and models.

Sustainability Issues in Human Computer Interaction Design

International Journal of Technical Research and Applications, 2014

The ICT market is growing rapidly and more business and social networking systems is crossing over to less developed regions. This IT usage expansion is associated with increasing environmental threats in the form of greenhouse effects and hardly decommissioned e-waste. For this reason sustainable development became an issue in the last two decades of the 20 th century. Recently, sustainable software engineering has become a hot research topic; it spans sustainability aspects in all stages of software lifecycle. This paper discusses sustainability issues in the human-interaction design phase, and it suggests appropriate steps which would lead to tackle HCI sustainability issues such as lower power consumption, waste and saving the wellbeing of human users.

Print this paper, kill a tree: Environmental sustainability as a research topic for human-computer interaction

Submitted to Proc CHI, 2010

Many HCI researchers have recently begun to examine the opportunities to use ICTs to promote environmental sustainability and ecological consciousness on the part of technology users. This paper examines the limits upon this work as currently construed. In particular, it argues that the political and cultural contexts of environmental practice must be part of an effective solution. Research on ecological politics and the political economy of environmentalism suggest some new directions for the relationship between sustainability ...

A Proposed Framework for Assessing Environmental Sustainability in the HCI Community

ABSTRACT We propose a framework for assessing the sustainability of interactive technologies. Our goal is to initiate steps towards a common standard of measurement for sustainability in the HCI community. This could help motivate green competition, raise consumer awareness, and acknowledge environmental leadership. In this paper we summarize our methodology, our results, and discuss how the framework can be integrated for testing within the HCI community.

A Methodology and a Tool to Support the Sustainable Design of Interactive Systems

Extended Abstracts of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

Sustainable HCI was initially structured along two axes: sustainability in design, i.e. reducing the material impact of software and hardware, and sustainability through design, i.e. infuencing user behavior to reduce energy consumption. These approaches have been criticized for being reductive and insufcient in the face of the systemic problem of ecological transition. Some voices in the HCI community call for a broader consideration of non-human aspects in HCI and argue that new methods and tools should be developed for this purpose. The thesis aims at proposing a methodology to understand the interactions between the system to be designed (e.g. agricultural robot) and the dynamics of the socio-technical and social system (e.g. the agriculture and food sectors), in order to avoid simplistic solutions that could be counter-productive (e.g. rebound efect). It draws on the methods, tools, and techniques of systemic design (a recent feld of research that brings together design and systems thinking) in order to build, with the stakeholders and the help of experts, a model of the socio-technical system, its dynamics, and its possible interactions with the system to be designed. The aim is not to build a "digital twin" of the socio-technical system from which one could predict its evolution, but rather to co-build a handmade and approximate model to support debate, to inform de cisions, and to compare scenarios. To this end, the thesis proposes a "quali-quantitative" modeling tool based on the formalism of causal loop diagrams. CCS CONCEPTS KEYWORDS 1 INTRODUCTION • teraction design process and methods. Human-centered computing → Human computer interaction (HCI); HCI design and evaluation methods; Interaction design; In Sustainability, Climate change, Modeling tool, Socio-technical and social systems

Sustainable Interactions as Design Objects That Promote Digital Humanism

Proceedings, 2022

The main purpose of sustainable interaction design is to meet global challenges in society, the economy, and the environment to an extent that goes beyond the well-being of human beings and attempts to promote the well-being of all beings. This paper examines the relationship between sustainable interaction design and digital humanism. Interactions as objects of design could/should be characterized as able to afford sustainable behavior for the following reasons: their very existence is sustainable, they are designed to evoke sustainability, or they are part of a sustainable system. Humanity needs to realize that every single human being is part of the humanitarian and ecological crisis. Through sustainable interaction design, we could really help users feel that they are part of the solution and that their actions can truly change lives. We seek answers related to the design, materiality, and contribution of sustainable interactions in shaping more humane interfaces.

Designing Sustainable Interactions for Digital Humanism

New Explorations: A Special Issue: Digital Humanism and the Future of Humanity , 2022

The main purpose of Sustainable Interaction Design is to meet global challenges in society, economy and environment to an extent that goes beyond the well-being of human beings but looks forward to the sustained well-being of all beings. This paper examines the relation between Sustainable Interaction Design and Digital Humanism. Interactions as objects of design could/should be characterized as able to afford sustainable behavior for the following reasons: their very existence is sustainable, they are designed to evoke sustainability, or they are part of a sustainable system. Humanity needs to realize that every single human being is part of the humanitarian and ecological crisis. Through Sustainable Interaction Design, we could potentially help users feel that they are part of the solution and that their actions can purposely alter the way they experience life. We seek answers related to the design, the ontology, and the contribution of sustainable interactions in shaping more humane interfaces.

A Systematic Review of Sustainability and Aspects of Human-Computer Interaction

Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2014

Sustainability is the term employed for the practice of ensuring that goods and services are produced in ways that do not use resources that cannot be replaced. This practice has been in focus on several different research agendas. In the area of Human-Computer Interaction, studies devoted to works investigating this matter began to appear eight years ago. It is a timely moment to look back and see how much the community has achieved. This paper provides the results of a Systematic Review carried out in four scientific databases. The selected papers were grouped considering the topics they present, the methodological approach adopted and the kind of outcomes that emerged. The results suggest that among the different methodological approaches adopted, literature reviews and criticism still form the main basis to underpin the outcomes. Moreover, climate change and energy savings were found to be the specific areas that were most researched. The results obtained make it possible to suggest opportunities for further research.

Hci for community and international development

CHI '08 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2008

This workshop explores the challenges in applying, extending and inventing appropriate methods and contributions of Human Computer Interaction (HCI) to International economic and community Development. We address interaction design for parts of the world that are often marginalized by the Global North as well as people in the Global North who are themselves similarly marginalized by poverty or other barriers. We hope to extend the boundaries of the field of Human Computer Interaction by spurring a discussion on how existing methods and practices can be adapted and modified, and how new practices can be developed, to deal with the unique challenges posed by these contexts.