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X-WR-CALNAME:Delft Design for Values Institute
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://delftdesignforvalues.nl
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Delft Design for Values Institute
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DTSTART:20250101T000000
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260209
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260214
DTSTAMP:20260425T212436
CREATED:20260117T133811Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260211T145736Z
UID:15686-1770595200-1771027199@delftdesignforvalues.nl
SUMMARY:PhD Course: Design for Well-being
DESCRIPTION:Technology holds great promise for enhancing human well-being\, improving health\, safety\, connection\, and comfort\, yet it can also create new forms of stress\, inequality\, and harm. This intensive PhD course explores the complex relationship between technology and human well-being.\n\nWhat you will explore\n\n\n\nWhat does human well-being entail?\nHow do technologies promote or undermine it?\nWho gets to design technologies that shape our well-being?\nWhat values are embedded\, prioritized\, or neglected in these designs?\n\n\n\nTopics Covered\n\n\n\nTechnology and values — Historical overview of values in philosophy of technology\nEmbedding values in technology — Key theories and philosophical accounts\nDesign for Values — Value Sensitive Design\, participatory design\, value conflicts and change\nUnderstanding well-being — Different conceptualizations and theories\nWell-being and technology — How technology can enhance or undermine flourishing\nDesigning for well-being — Practical approaches\, examples\, and case studies (including AI and digital health)\n\n\n\nLearning Outcomes\n\nAfter completing this course\, you will be able to: \n\nUnderstand the relation between technology\, values\, and human well-being\nArgue why technology can or cannot embody values\nDifferentiate main approaches to designing for human well-being\nEvaluate technology in terms of its impact on human well-being\n\n\n\nLecturers\n\n\nSteffen Steinert (TU Delft)\nIbo van de Poel (TU Delft)\nPieter Desmet (TU Delft)\nNaomi Jacobs (University of Twente)\nMatthew J. Dennis (TU Eindhoven)\nIulia Lefter (TU Delft)\nand guest lecturers\n\n\nPractical Details\n\nDates: 9–13 February 2026\nLocation: TU Delft Campus\nCredits: 5 ECTS\nTarget group: PhD students (ReMa students welcome if places available)\nRegistration deadline: 27 January 2026\n\nCosts\n\n\n\nFree — Members of 4TU Ethics\, OZSW\, or another Dutch research school in the Humanities (LOGOS)\n€300 — All others\n\n\n\nAssessment\n\nActive participation required. Participants must complete required readings before each session and write a blog post as final assignment.\n\nRegister\n\nRegister via OZSW\n\nContact\n\nSteffen Steinert and Ibo van de Poel (TU Delft)\ni.r.vandepoel@tudelft.nl\nOrganised by: OZSW\, 4TU Ethics\, Delft Design for Values Institute
URL:https://delftdesignforvalues.nl/event/phd-course-design-for-well-being/
LOCATION:TU Delft – Campus
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delftdesignforvalues.nl/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/PhD-course-image-1-scaled.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20260114T133000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20260114T143000
DTSTAMP:20260425T212436
CREATED:20260107T091431Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260110T195205Z
UID:15441-1768397400-1768401000@delftdesignforvalues.nl
SUMMARY:SIG Talks: Design for Justice – Exploring Biases in Green Colonialism in Engineering and Policy Discourse
DESCRIPTION:About the SIG Talk\nAs part of the Design for Justice Special Interest Group (SIG) of the Delft Design for Values Institute (DDfV)\, this SIG Talk presents an exploratory study on how colonial biases embedded in the Western development paradigm shape moral and policy framings of contemporary “green” transitions. The research builds on earlier work within the DDfV seed project “Design for Values and Critical Raw Materials: A Decolonial Justice Perspective”\, funded by the Delft Design for Values Institute. \nPresentation\nExploring Biases in the Western Development Paradigm: Traces of Green Colonialism in Engineering and Policy Discourse \nPresenters:Tristan de Wildt & Anna Melnyk \nDescription\nThis exploratory study investigates how colonial biases embedded in the Western development paradigm shape moral and policy framings of “green” transitions. The analysis focuses on the Aitik copper mine in northern Sweden\, one of Europe’s largest open-pit copper mines\, which supplies raw materials for the energy transition while affecting Sámi traditional lands and reindeer herding. This makes Aitik a compelling case for examining how sustainability\, justice\, and responsibility are differently framed across discourses. \nThe study compares three domains: \n\n\nIndigenous discourse (Sámi Council\, Sametinget\, Protect Sápmi)\, which foregrounds relationality\, sovereignty\, and justice-based worldviews. \n\n\nPolicy and regulatory discourse (Swedish and EU)\, which situates mining within sustainable development\, security\, and strategic autonomy narratives. \n\n\nCorporate and industrial discourse (Boliden and sectoral organisations)\, which emphasises innovation\, responsibility\, and green growth. \n\n\nDrawing on emerging indicators of green colonialism (e.g. domination\, resource transfer\, land appropriation\, exploitative labour\, and the erasure of Indigenous lifeways)\, the study analyses value framings\, agency distributions\, and dominant metaphors. The findings reveal how technocratic “green transition” narratives\, epistemic hierarchies\, and instrumental views of land perpetuate colonial power dynamics\, while Indigenous discourse articulates alternative moral frameworks grounded in reciprocity\, cultural continuity\, and self-determination. \nTo join online\, please contact: a.melnyk@tudelft.nl
URL:https://delftdesignforvalues.nl/event/sig-talks-design-for-justice-exploring-biases-in-green-colonialism-in-engineering-and-policy-discourse/
LOCATION:TU Delft\, TPM-Hall I\, 31.A1.250\, Jaffalaan 5\, Delft\, 2628 BX\, Netherlands
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delftdesignforvalues.nl/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/SEG-Talks-Justice-2-scaled.jpg
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