Peter Lauritsen
Aarhus University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Peter Lauritsen.
Codesign | 2015
Lars Bo Andersen; Peter Danholt; Kim Halskov; Nicolai Brodersen Hansen; Peter Lauritsen
This article starts from the paradox that, although participation is a defining trait of participatory design (PD), there are few explicit discussions in the PD literature of what constitutes participation. Thus, from a point of departure in Actor-Network Theory (ANT), this article develops an analytical understanding of participation. It is argued that participation is a matter of concern, something inherently unsettled, to be investigated and explicated in every design project. Specifically, it is argued that (1) participation is an act overtaken by numerous others, rather than carried out by individuals and (2) that participation partially exists in all elements of a project. These traits are explicated in a design project called ‘Teledialogue’, where the participants are unfolded as networks of reports, government institutions, boyfriends, social workers and so on. The argument is synthesised as three challenges for PD: (1) participants are network configurations, (2) participation is an aspect of all project activities and (3) there is no gold standard for participation.
Information, Communication & Society | 2018
Lars Bo Andersen; Ask Risom Bøge; Peter Danholt; Peter Lauritsen
ABSTRACT Privacy is a major concern when new technologies are introduced between public authorities and private citizens. What is meant by privacy, however, is often unclear and contested. Accordingly, this article utilises grounded theory to study privacy empirically in the research and design project Teledialogue aimed at introducing new ways for public case managers and placed children to communicate through IT. The resulting argument is that privacy can be understood as an encounter, that is, as something that arises between implicated actors and entails some degree of friction and negotiation. An argument which is further qualified through the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze. The article opens with a review of privacy literature before continuing to present privacy as an encounter with five different foci: what technologies bring into the encounter; who is related to privacy by implication; what is entailed by the spaces of Teledialogue; how privacy relates to projected futures; and how privacy is also an encounter between authority and care. In the end, it is discussed how privacy conceptualised as an encounter is not already there surrounding people or places but rather has to be traced in the specific and situated relations between implicated actors, giving rise to different normative concerns in each case.
surveillance and society | 2009
Christopher Gad; Peter Lauritsen
Geoforum | 2013
Anders Albrechtslund; Peter Lauritsen
Oxford Bibliographies Online Datasets | 2017
Ask Risom Bøge; Anders Albrechtslund; Peter Lauritsen
surveillance and society | 2015
Peter Lauritsen; Andreas Feuerbach
Dagbladet Information | 2014
Lone Koefoed Hansen; Peter Lauritsen
Altinget.dk | 2014
Peter Lauritsen; Thomas Ryberg
Nordisk Psykologi | 2011
Christopher Gad; Peter Lauritsen
Archive | 2010
Christopher Gad; Peter Lauritsen