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Insolvent [Paperback / softback]

  • Format: Paperback / softback, 320 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, 20 black and white illustrations
  • Pub. Date: 06-Jun-2023
  • Publisher: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262545608
  • ISBN-13: 9780262545600
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  • Price: 73,00 €
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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 320 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, 20 black and white illustrations
  • Pub. Date: 06-Jun-2023
  • Publisher: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262545608
  • ISBN-13: 9780262545600
Other books in subject:
"This book proposes a framework for the design of systems that will advance social and environmental justice along with technical and economic objectives"--

How we can enact meaningful change in computing to meet the urgent need for sustainability and justice.

The deep entanglement of information technology with our societies has raised hope for a transition to more sustainable and just communities—those that phase out fossil fuels, distribute public goods fairly, allow free access to information, and waste less. In principle, computing should be able to help. But in practice, we live in a world in which opaque algorithms steer us toward misinformation and unsustainable consumerism. Insolvent shows why computing’s dominant frame of thinking is conceptually insufficient to address our current challenges, and why computing continues to incur societal debts it cannot pay back. Christoph Becker shows how we can reorient design perspectives in computer science to better align with the values of sustainability and justice.

Becker positions the role of information technology and computing in environmental sustainability, social justice, and the intersection of the two, and explains why designing IT for just sustainability is both technically and ethically challenging . Becker goes on to argue that computing could be aided by critical friends—disciplines that draw on critical social theory, feminist thought, and systems thinking—to make better sense of its role in society. Finally, Becker demonstrates that it is possible to fuse critical perspectives with work in computer science, showing new and fruitful directions for computing professionals and researchers to pursue.

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Short-listed for PROSE Award - Engineering & Technology.
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Just Sustainability Design 1(28)
I IS COMPUTING INSOLVENT?
1 The Design Of Sustainability
29(28)
2 Just Sustainabilities And The Debts Of Computing
57(20)
3 The Myths Of Computing
77(32)
4 Problemism: The Insolvency Of Computational Thinking
109(18)
II RESTRUCTURING
5 Computing's Critical Friends
127(26)
6 Software Is Never Neutral: How Do Values Become Facts?
153(14)
7 People Are More Than Rational: Beware The Normative Fallacy
167(26)
8 Problems Are Framings: The Discordant Pluralism Of Just Sustainability Design
193(20)
III REORIENTING SYSTEMS DESIGN
9 Leverage Points For Change: From Insolvent Computing To Just Sustainability Design
213(12)
10 Critical Requirements Practice
225(30)
11 Searching For Just, Sustainable Design Decisions
255(24)
12 A Silicone Ring: Social Responsibility And Collective Action
279(18)
Conclusion: This Changes Computing 297(10)
Notes 307(16)
References 323(48)
Index 371