Projects per year
Abstract
Efforts to integrate living organisms in the design of new technolo- gies are often motivated by prospects of greater sustainability and increased connection with more-than-human worlds. In this paper, we critically discuss these motivations by analysing the vast and mostly hidden ecologies of more-than-human organisms implicated in a biodesign lab experiment. Through the lenses of labour theory, we investigate the extent to which organisms’ bodily functions and relationships can be subsumed into capitalist modes of production. In order to help reveal and map out the network of more-than-human contributors to biodesign, we develop a workshop method and a labour provenance analytical framework that identifies five types of more-than-human labourers, stretching from the centre to the periphery of biodesign. We conclude by discussing how sustainable approaches should account for wider more-than-human ecologies, and how the labour lens could help stress conflicting goals, implicit anthropocentric agendas and ways of improving organismal welfare in biological design and HCI.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | CHI '25 |
Subtitle of host publication | Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems |
Publisher | ACM |
Pages | 1-22 |
Number of pages | 22 |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 16 Jan 2025 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- labour theory
- provenance
- more-than-human
- ecologies
- sustainability
- design
- ethics
- multispecies
- Bio-HCI
- DIY-bio
- Microbe-HCI
- biodesign
- posthumanism
- care
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- 1 Finished
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21EBTA Engineering Biology for Cell and Gene Therapy Applications
Rosser, S. (Principal Investigator), Calvert, J. (Co-investigator), Cobb, S. (Co-investigator), Davies, J. (Co-investigator), Menolascina, F. (Co-investigator), Pollard, S. (Co-investigator) & Stracquadanio, G. (Co-investigator)
31/01/22 → 30/01/24
Project: Research