Apologize for unintended cross-mailing
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Special Issue on
Democratic Technology Design
Call for Papers -> link
to be published at the
Interaction Design and Architecture(s) Journal (IxD&A)
(ISSN 1826-9745, eISSN 2283-2998)
https://ixdea.org/
https://doi.org/10.55612/s-5002-000
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*** Since 2015 also in Emerging
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IxD&A implements the Gold Open Access (OA) road to its
contents
with no charge to the authors (submission & paper processing)
Help us in improving the quality of the editorial process and of
the journal, please donate: -> link
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Guest Editors:
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Alma Leora Culén, Jasmin Niess, Nicholas Stevens, Jason Miklian
University of Oslo, Norway
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Important dates:
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- Submission deadline: May 15th, 2026
- Notification to the authors: July 15th, 2026
- Camera ready paper: August 31st, 2026
- Publication of the special issue: Autumn 2026 (tentative)
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Overview
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Democracy today is not only debated in parliaments and assemblies,
but also continuously
shaped — and sometimes aggravated — by the technologies that mediate
our everyday lives. Social media feeds amplify outrage,
recommendation engines entrench polarisation, and algorithmic
infrastructures concentrate power in the hands of a few global
actors. What once seemed like a promise of digital democracy now too
often appears as a machinery of division and manipulation.
Yet, design opens other possibilities. Across various research
fields, communities and
researchers are experimenting with alternative technologies,
including cooperative social media platforms, deliberation tools for
citizens’ assemblies, AI systems that support participation, and
infrastructures for commoning. These are not only technical
artefacts but also democratic experiments, reminding us that
technologies can embody values such as inclusion, accountability,
transparency, and collective agency.
This special issue explores democratic technology design, the idea
that technologies can be designed not merely for efficiency or
engagement, but for democracy itself. What would it mean to treat
algorithms as accountable civic actors? To imagine infrastructures
as shared commons? To design platforms that cultivate empathy,
dialogue, and care rather than outrage?
We invite contributions that make such imagination possible:
conceptual frameworks linking political theory with design methods;
participatory and relational practices for developing democratic
technologies; empirical exemplars of counter-models to platform
capitalism; and critical reflections on how design might resist
manipulation, polarisation, and exclusion.Designing for democracy is
not only a technical challenge but also a cultural, social, and
political one. It requires crossing disciplinary boundaries—bringing
together HCI, participatory design, CSCW, design research, STS,
philosophy, and political theory. By consolidating these
perspectives, this special issue aims to chart a growing but still
fragmented field, opening a space for rethinking how technologies
can support democratic futures.
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Topics of Interest
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We invite a broad range of researchers to address both
theoretical and practical issues around democratic technology
design, including conceptual papers, methodological innovations,
empirical case studies, design exemplars, and critical
reflections.
Submissions may address (but are not limited to) the following
themes:
• Principles and frameworks, e.g. using theories of democracy as
design principles
• Practices and methods, e.g. participatory and relational design
for democracy, tools
for deliberation and collective decision-making, speculative and
adversarial design
practices
• Systems and alternatives, e.g. alternative or counter-models to
platform capitalism,
cooperative social media and civic platforms, AI systems designed
for participation
and accountability, digital infrastructures for commoning
• Critical and situated perspectives, e.g. responses to crises
such as polarisation, false
information, and exclusion, inclusivity, feminist, postcolonial,
and indigenous
perspectives, democratic technology and long-term social justice
design
• Design artefacts and prototypes, e.g. design contributions,
prototypes, and exemplars
of democratic technology, transition and infrastructuring
approaches to sustainable
democratic futures.
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Submission guidelines and procedure
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All submissions (abstracts and later final manuscripts) must be
original and may not be under review by another publication.
The manuscripts should be submitted either in .doc or in
.rtf format.
All papers will be blindly peer-reviewed by at least two reviewers.
Authors are invited to submit 8-30 pages paper (including authors'
information, abstract, all tables, figures, references, etc.).
The paper should be written according to the IxD&A
authors' guidelines
->https://ixdea.org/authors-guidelines/
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Authors' guidelines
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Paper submission page:
-> link
(Please upload all submissions using the Submission page.
When submitting the paper, please, choose the section:
"SI: Democratic Technology Design")
More information on the submission procedure and on
the characteristics
of the paper format can be found on the website of the
IxD&A Journal
where information on the copyright policy and responsibility
of authors,
publication ethics and malpractice are published.
For scientific advice and for any query please contact the guest
editors: marking the subject as: SI: Democratic Technology
Design
• almira [at] uio [dot] no
• jasminni [at] uio [dot] no
• nichoss [at] uio [dot] no
• jason.miklian [at] globe [dot] uio [dot] no