2021
DOI: 10.1111/cuag.12277
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Overcoming Barriers to Including Agricultural Workers in the Co‐Design of New AgTech: Lessons from a COVID‐19‐Present World

Abstract: Collaborative design (co‐design) is a design strategy for generating relevant and socially acceptable technologies, and is inherently political by nature of its inclusion of particular groups and interests. This paper explores how to ethically and responsibly prepare for, notice and overcome barriers to including agricultural workers in the co‐design of new agricultural technologies. Drawing from feminist science and technology studies (STS), we offer response‐able mattering as an analytic tool to explore how … Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…These examples show that the societal costs paid to maintain an IP-dominant system—paid by beneficial technologies going unpursued, or by researchers pursuing technical directions out of direct-relationship with possible end-users or wider societal actors—is likely underestimated, particularly in the field of AgTech where end-users such as farmers and agricultural workers are often not considered or left out of technology design processes (Burch and Legun 2021 ; Rotz et al 2019a , b ). More broadly, these examples suggest that the solution is not merely about including the relevant actors “upstream,” or earlier in technology development processes, because IP incessantly requires and produces boundaries throughout these processes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…These examples show that the societal costs paid to maintain an IP-dominant system—paid by beneficial technologies going unpursued, or by researchers pursuing technical directions out of direct-relationship with possible end-users or wider societal actors—is likely underestimated, particularly in the field of AgTech where end-users such as farmers and agricultural workers are often not considered or left out of technology design processes (Burch and Legun 2021 ; Rotz et al 2019a , b ). More broadly, these examples suggest that the solution is not merely about including the relevant actors “upstream,” or earlier in technology development processes, because IP incessantly requires and produces boundaries throughout these processes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As researchers move from laboratories out into relations and sites of use, they will be forced to contend with these new responsibilities (and their transforming response-abilities), as well as any boundaries existing and emerging within these new relations. The inclusion of previously excluded actors introduces a number of new (or previously ignored) concerns, ethical considerations and power dynamics that also need to be contended with in practice (Borch and Throne-Holst 2021 ; Burch and Legun 2021 ; da Silva et al 2019 ; de Bakker et al 2014 ; Fritz and Meinhertz 2020 ; Nathan 2015 ; Ribeiro et al 2018 ). As Regan ( 2021 ) has argued, practicing more responsible forms of research and innovation will require researchers build new competencies and undergo changes in mindset.…”
Section: Ip Boundaries and Located Response-abilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Burch and Legun 2021), with calls to build reflexivity into project methodologies (e.g Rossing et al 2021)…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%