Bridging Work Practice and System Design: Integrating Systemic Analysis, Appreciative Intervention and Practitioner Participation. Karasti, H. Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), 10(2):211–246, 2001.
abstract   bibtex   
This article discusses the integration of work practice and system design. By scrutin- ising the unfolding discourse of workshop participants the co-construction of work practice issues as relevant design considerations is described. Through a mutual exploration of ethnography and participatory design the contributing constituents to the co-construction process are identified and put forward as elements in the integration of ‘systemic analysis' and ‘appreciative intervention'. The systemic analysis proposes collaboratively grounding the emergent understandings on an inductive and iterative analysis of actual technologically mediated work practice. The appreciative intervention, in turn, calls for envisioning images of future system and context through a recognition of presence and change intertwined in the existing ways of working. The identified elements are joined into three dimensions of interplay, namely the analytic distance, the horizon of work practice transformations and the situated generalisations, which reformulate new conceptualisations of what the integration of work practice and participatory system design is all about. It is suggested that these dimensions together with practitioner participation call into question some of the taken-for-granted assumptions and commonly forwarded intractable disciplinary dichotomies and contribute more generally to bridging work practice and participatory design.
@article{karasti_bridging_2001,
	title = {Bridging {Work} {Practice} and {System} {Design}: {Integrating} {Systemic} {Analysis}, {Appreciative} {Intervention} and {Practitioner} {Participation}},
	volume = {10},
	abstract = {This article discusses the integration of work practice and system design. By scrutin- ising the unfolding discourse of workshop participants the co-construction of work practice issues as relevant design considerations is described. Through a mutual exploration of ethnography and participatory design the contributing constituents to the co-construction process are identified and put forward as elements in the integration of ‘systemic analysis' and ‘appreciative intervention'. The systemic analysis proposes collaboratively grounding the emergent understandings on an inductive and iterative analysis of actual technologically mediated work practice. The appreciative intervention, in turn, calls for envisioning images of future system and context through a recognition of presence and change intertwined in the existing ways of working. The identified elements are joined into three dimensions of interplay, namely the analytic distance, the horizon of work practice transformations and the situated generalisations, which reformulate new conceptualisations of what the integration of work practice and participatory system design is all about. It is suggested that these dimensions together with practitioner participation call into question some of the taken-for-granted assumptions and commonly forwarded intractable disciplinary dichotomies and contribute more generally to bridging work practice and participatory design.},
	number = {2},
	journal = {Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW)},
	author = {Karasti, Helena},
	year = {2001},
	keywords = {analysis, cscw, ethnography, image interpretation, integration, interdisciplinarity, intervention, participatory design, practitioner participation, radiology, system design, work practice},
	pages = {211--246},
}

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