Participatory tensions in working with a vulnerable population

Authors

  • Aakash Gautam
  • Chandani Shrestha
  • Andrew Kulak
  • Steve Harrison
  • Deborah Tatar

Abstract

This note uncovers a design tension in participatory design practice in the context of two organizations in Nepal working on reducing sex-trafficking and helping survivors. The dilemma consists of contradictions between the public face that the organizations present to the world and the more complex underlying picture painted by survivors. In initial work, we created and deployed a value-elicitation game for survivors that gave us better access to their voices. However, the implications for ongoing participatory work remain to be unpacked. The veneer may constitute a necessary part of the staffs' successful interactions with external funders. The survivors rely on the resources that the organization gathers, yet the veneer may also obscure some aspects of the survivors' needs. The question raised is "how should our PD practice position itself with respect to the ideal of comprehensive democratic participation when potential harm may ensue to vulnerable people?"

Full text at ACM

Published

2018-09-18

Issue

Section

SESSION: On the edge