Cover des Buchs: Uncertain Journeys into Digital Futures
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Uncertain Journeys into Digital Futures

Inter- and Transdisciplinary Research for Mitigating Wicked Societal and Environmental Problems
Herausgeber:innen:
Verlag:
 2025

Zusammenfassung

Das Weizenbaum Institut veranstaltete im Juni 2024 in Berlin seine sechste Jahreskonferenz zum Thema „Uncertain Journeys into Digital Futures“. Zentral ging es dabei um die digitale Transformation und die sozio-ökologische Transformation der Gesellschaft, die eng miteinander verknüpft sind. Zu den Herausforderungen gehören der Schutz der Menschen, demokratischer Institutionen und der Umwelt sowie die Teilhabe an der Gestaltung der Transformationen und eines inklusiven und gerechten Lebens. Schlüsselthemen zur Lösung dieser Herausforderungen sind Smart Cities und urbane Transformation, digitale Technologien für Nachhaltigkeit, soziale Gerechtigkeit, Governance und Bürgerbeteiligung sowie Vorstellungen und Visionen von Zukünften.Mit Beiträgen vonManuel Atug | Dr. Thomas Bartoschek | Dr. Nikolas Becker | Dr. Grischa Beier | Prof. Dr. Christoph Bieber | Bonny Brandenburger | Prof. Francesca Bria | Prof. Florian Butollo | Anouk Cenan, B.A. | Prof. Dr. Tina Comes, M.A.E. | Jordana Composto | Prof. Teresa Cerratto | Nicole Döpp | Dr. Ame Elliott | Dr. Lorenz Erdmann | Niklas Frechen, M.A. | Anne Goldmann, M.A. | Dr. Jennifer Haase | Dr. Andrea Hamm | Pauline Heger, M.A. | Dr. Mennatullah Hendawy | Prof. Dr.-Ing. Christian Herzog, M.A. | Luca Hesse, B.Sc. | Lena Hoffmann | Prof. Dr. Sigrid Kannengießer | Benjamin Karic, M.Sc. | Ann-Kathrin Katzinski, BA | Dr. Simone Kimpeler | Dr. Krishnan Radhika | Caroline Krohn | Felix Kronlage-Dammers | Dr. Anne K. Krüger | Furkan Koc | Dr. Thomas Kox | Prof. Dr. Verena Majuntke | Prof. Dr. Florian Meissner | Dr. Anne Mollen | Meyke Nering Bögel | Jan Magnus Nold | Seyi Olojo | Rebecca Panskus | Robin Preiß, M.A. | Dr. Lubna Rashid | Martina Angela Sasse | Paula Scharf, M.Sc. | Prof. Dr.-Ing. Ina Schieferdecker | Dr. Josephine B. Schmitt | Dr. Yuya Shibuya | Samuel T. Simon | Dr. Marc Steen | Dr. Felix Sühlmann-Faul | Dr. André Ullrich | Prof. Dr. Martijn Warnier | Prof. Elke U. Weber | Ines Weigand | Jan Wieland | Annemarie Witschas | Prof. Herbert Zech | Dr. Daniela Zetti

Schlagworte


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Bibliographische Angaben

Copyrightjahr
2025
ISBN-Print
978-3-7560-0150-7
ISBN-Online
978-3-7489-4758-5
Verlag
Nomos, Baden-Baden
Reihe
Normsetzung und Entscheidungsverfahren – Schriftenreihe des Weizenbaum-Instituts für normative Wissenschaften
Band
1
Sprache
Englisch
Seiten
384
Produkttyp
Sammelband

Inhaltsverzeichnis

KapitelSeiten
  1. Titelei/InhaltsverzeichnisSeiten 1 - 8 Download Kapitel (PDF)
  2. André Ullrich, Thomas Kox, Herbert Zech Download Kapitel (PDF)
    1. 1. Smart cities and urban transformation
    2. 2. Digital technologies for sustainability
    3. 3. Social justice, governance, and citizen participation
    4. 4. Imaginaries and visions of futures
    1. Francesca Bria Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. The age of polycrisis and a new industrial paradigm
        1. a) The chips war
        2. b) Computational power
        3. c) Market power in artificial intelligence
      2. 3. Surveillance capitalism and the threat to a democratic digital public sphere
        1. a) Digital industrial policy for EU strategic autonomy
        2. b) A vision for an AI digital commons ecosystem
        3. c) Building the Euro stack
      3. 5. The way forward: A new Manhattan Project for science, technology, education, and culture
    2. Mennatullah Hendawy, Jan Wieland, Furkan Koc Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Method
      3. 3. Results
      4. 4. Discussion: The passivisation of citizens through the use of technology
      5. 5. Conclusion
    3. Bonny Brandenburger, Andrea Hamm, Caroline Krohn, Felix Sühlmann-Faul, Manuel Atug, Nicole Döpp, André Ullrich Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
        1. a) Challenges for digitalisation projects in smart regions
        2. b) Enabling factors for municipal digitalisation projects
      2. 3. The Süderbrarup case study and methodological approach
        1. a) Challenges of municipal digitalisation projects
        2. b) Enabling factors of municipal digitalisation projects
        3. c) Connecting challenges and enabling factors
      3. 5. Discussion
      4. 6. Conclusions
    1. Ina K. Schieferdecker Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Technologies and societal progress – demystifying technical progress
      2. 2. Sustainability and digitalisation
      3. 3. The impact of AI on environmental sustainability
      4. 4. Conclusion
    2. Lubna Rashid, Jordana Composto, Elke Weber Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Research design and hypotheses
      3. 3. Methods
      4. 4. Results
      5. 5. Discussion
      6. 6. Conclusion
    3. Florian Butollo, Jennifer Haase, Ann-Kathrin Katzinski, Anne K. Krüger Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Research framework
      3. 3. Methods
          1. aa) Skills
          2. bb) Creativity
          3. cc) Authenticity
          1. aa) Skills
          2. bb) Creativity
          3. cc) Authenticity
          1. aa) Skills
          2. bb) Creativity
          3. cc) Authenticity
      4. 5. Conclusion
    4. Paula Scharf, Benjamin Karic, Luca Hesse, Thomas Bartoschek Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Concept
      3. 3. Prototype
      4. 4. Applicability
      5. 5. Conclusion
    5. Verena Majuntke, Lena Hoffmann, Felix Kronlage-Dammers, Grischa Beier, Nikolas Becker Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Green coding – bridging the gap from theory to practice
      2. 2. Why is GC important for the transformation towards sustainability development?
      3. 3. What is the current situation concerning GC?
      4. 4. What role do open-source approaches play regarding GC?
      5. 5. Advancing research and practical implementation of GC – what key steps and strategies are needed?
    1. Tina Comes, Meyke Nering Bögel, Martijn Warnier Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Case study: Rapidly expanding refugee camps
      3. 3. Research approach and models
      4. 4. Results: The interplay of refugee behaviour and location decisions
      5. 5. Conclusions
    2. Christian Herzog, Daniela Zetti, Robin Preiß Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Ill-structured problems
      3. 3. Digital sovereignty as an ill-structured problem?
      4. 4. Conclusions
    3. Anne Mollen, Sigrid Kannengießer Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. The interdisciplinary research field of sustainable AI
      3. 3. Socio-technological perspectives on AI infrastructures
      4. 4. Shaping AI infrastructures (more) sustainably
      5. 5. Conclusion
    4. Florian Meissner, Jan Magnus Nold, Martina Angela Sasse, Rebecca Panskus, Alexander Wilke Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. What are the objectives of communication on cybersecurity?
      2. 2. State of research on public cybersecurity communication
      3. 3. Theoretical background: Basic principles for effective security communication
      4. 4. Methodology of data collection and analysis
        1. a) Quantitative findings
        2. b) Qualitative findings
      5. 6. Conclusions
      6. 7. Limitations and outlook
      7. Appendix: List of analysed tweets
    5. Ame Elliott Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
        1. a) How data donation can promote clean energy usage
        2. b) Identifying a usage scenario
        3. c) Goals
        1. a) Structure and activities
        2. b) Explanatory material
        3. c) Paper prototyping
        1. a) Hypothesis
        2. b) Potential explanations for the ambivalent response
        3. c) Insights from the workshops
        1. a) Crisis of professional knowledge in handling wicked problems
        2. b) Helping design professions serve the public interest
    6. Marc Steen Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Ubuntu, a language app, and relational ethics
      3. 3. Māori data sovereignty and self-determination
      4. 4. Building a Lakota sweat lodge and building computer hardware
      5. 5. LAN Houses and mobile phones in a favela
      6. 5. Discussion and conclusion
    7. Ines Weigand Download Kapitel (PDF)
        1. a) Complex problems and the need for new ways of knowledge production
        2. b) Practicing the debate: new ways of learning and understanding
      1. 2. Method
        1. a) Relationship with academia and its institutions
        2. b) Crossing borders: transdisciplinarity and art-science collaborations
        3. c) Co-creation, community learning and networks
        4. d) Openness and accessibility: do-it-yourself and do-it-together
        5. e) Situating the practice: site-specific and practice-based work
      2. 4. Discussion and outlook
    8. Mennatullah Hendawy, Jana Baum, Anouk Cenan, Niklas Frechen, Anne Goldmann, Pauline Heger, Christoph Bieber Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Smart Cities: a history
      3. 3. Smart Cities: ideal concept vs reality
      4. 4. (Technical) decentralisation vs (administrative) centralisation?
      5. 5. The benefit of the Smart City hype
      6. 6. (How) will the concept of Smart Cities survive?
    9. Yuya Shibuya, Seyi Olojo, Andrea Hamm, Radhika Krishnan, Teresa Cerratto Pargman Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
      2. 2. Can counterdata be civic data?
      3. 3. Can civic data be counterdata?
      4. 4. Can civic data be open?
      5. 5. Can open data be civic data?
        1. a) Collaboration between diverse stakeholders, including big tech companies
        2. b) Maintaining ownership and understanding the context
      6. 7. Conclusion
    1. Josephine B. Schmitt, Samuel T. Simon Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
        1. a) Perceptions of the interrelatedness of digital transformation and sustainability
        2. b) Approaches to understanding future visions
        1. a) Procedure and sample
        2. b) Analysis strategy
        1. a) Characterisation of thematic clusters
        2. b) Visual interpretation
      2. 5. Discussion: How do the drawings relate to peoples’ imaginaries?
      3. 6. Conclusion
    2. Annemarie Witschas Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
        1. Tracing the fabrication of futures
      2. 3. Elitist futures
        1. a) Narrowing future corridors through a deterministic view of progress
        2. b) Distraction through exaggerated scenarios
      3. 5. The future as the final frontier: extending a colonial continuity
      4. 6. Building counterimaginaries
      5. 7. Conclusion
    3. Lorenz Erdmann, Simone Kimpeler Download Kapitel (PDF)
      1. 1. Introduction
        1. a) Steps of the horizon scanning process on digital futures
          1. aa) Scoping
          2. bb) Scanning
          3. cc) Participatory sensemaking
          4. dd) Desk research for validation of the findings
          5. ee) Foresight transfer
      2. 3. Reflection on debiasing in the horizon scanning process
      3. 4. Conclusion
    4. List of Authors (alphabetic order)Seiten 377 - 384 Download Kapitel (PDF)

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