In conversation with ghosts: Towards a hauntological approach to decolonial design for/with AI practices

Mugdha Patil, Nazli Cila, Johan Redström, Elisa Giaccardi

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Abstract

This is a critique of how designers deal with contending histories and multiple presents in design to speculate about socio-technical futures. The paper unpacks how embedded definitions and assumptions of temporality in current design tools contribute to coloniality in designed futures. As design practice becomes implicated in how oppression extends from physical systems to global digital platforms, our critique rejects the notion that it is only AI that needs fixing and it dissects the Futures Cone used in speculative design to make these issues visible. As an alternative, we offer a hauntological vocabulary to aid designers in reorienting their speculative tools and accommodating pluriversality in anticipatory futures. To illustrate the benefits of the proposed metaphors, we highlight examples of coloniality in digital spaces and emphasize the failure of speculative design to decolonize future imaginaries. Using points of reference from hauntology, those that engage with uncertain states of lingering or spectrality, and notions of nostalgia, absence, and anticipation, this paper contributes to rethinking the role that design tools play in colonizing future imaginaries, especially those pertaining to potentially disruptive technologies.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)55-76
JournalCoDesign
Volume20
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Funding

This research is part of the DCODE Network, a project funded under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No [955990].

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