
Shaowen Bardzell
· Professor and Chair of Interactive ComputingVerifiedGeorgia Institute of Technology · Computer Science
Active 2004–2026
About
Shaowen Bardzell is Chair and Professor at Georgia Institute of Technology's School of Interactive Computing. She holds a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Indiana University and pursues a humanistic research agenda within the research and practice of Human Computer Interaction (HCI). A common thread throughout her work is the exploration of the contributions of feminism, design, and social science to support technology’s role in social change. Her recent research topics include care ethics and feminist utopian perspectives on IT, research through design, women’s health, posthumanist approaches to sustainable design, computational agriculture and food justice, and cultural and creative industries in Asia. Her work is supported by the National Science Foundation, Intel Corporation, and the Mellon Foundation, among others.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Political Science
- Sociology
- Psychology
- Law
- Philosophy
- Engineering
- Nursing
- Epistemology
- Environmental ethics
- Medicine
- Public relations
- Engineering ethics
Selected publications
Whose Time Counts? Temporal Arrangements in Sociotechnical Infrastructures
2026-04-13 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorThis paper examines how infrastructures organize time in ways that unevenly distribute burden, access, and opportunity across communities. We draw on two ethnographic cases: eviction case filings in Atlanta, part of the state’s legal and housing governance infrastructure, and a sexual healthcare intervention in Chicago, situated within the city’s public health services. We advance HCI’s engagement with temporality by demonstrating how infrastructures sediment layers of political, social, and technical decisions over time. We conceptualize infrastructures as stratified formations where earlier allocations of power become materially and procedurally embedded, configuring present-day experiences of public systems. We define temporal arrangements as the patterned ways infrastructures shape and allocate time, producing unequal demands on who waits, who moves, and who must continually adjust. We describe two temporal arrangements—compression and gaps—to show how systems structure and constrain access to care, support, and basic services. By linking inherited infrastructural logics to everyday temporal burdens, we offer HCI a framework for examining how inequities persist through time.
2026-04-13
articleSenior authorAgainst the backdrop of shifting political landscapes, this workshop approaches the fragmented politics, values, and imaginaries in Human–Computer Interaction through the lens of ideologies. Ideologies, underlying belief systems of sections of the population, influence both society and the design of technology. Ideologies help to highlight tensions and forces that play a role in our research practices. We aim to disentangle ideological framings, allowing participants to identify possible research areas and collaboratively develop new ways of working with ideologies in HCI. Through hands-on activities—crafting conceptions of ideology and engaging in thematic group discussions—we explore how ideologies shape fundamental assumptions and catalyze societal change. This leverages HCI’s interdisciplinary methods to generate knowledge and impact beyond technological design.
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01
preprintOpen access2025-04-23 · 3 citations
articleDatafication of Climate Change: From Prediction to Participation
2025-08-18 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessHow is the climate crisis mediated by data?In this one-day hybrid workshop, we will gather an interdisciplinary group of critical computing scholars and practitioners examining and practising the different ways that climate change is becoming datafied.The datafication of climate change refers to the collection, analysis, and representation of data to inform decision-making around strategies for the prevention, mitigation, or adaptation to the impacts of climate change.While increased use of data promises to keep powerful actors accountable for their actions and enable targeted decision making necessary for policy analysis, there are challenges regarding how and what kinds of data are being used and for whom.Furthermore, the increased data usage also entails environmental impacts, such as the rising energy consumption, which may contradict the intended goals behind datafication in the first place.In this workshop, we aim to map the climate data pipeline, based on presentations by participants on their current research in relation to the data lifecycle (e.g.cleaning, storing, analysis, scraping, etc.) with a tentative output of a
Whose, Which, and What Crisis? A Critical Analysis of Crisis in Computing Supply Chains
2025-07-23 · 5 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorResisting AI Solutionism: Where Do We Go From Here?
2025-04-23 · 8 citations
article2025-10-17 · 2 citations
articleThe last five years have resulted in substantial changes to how computing affects work, how work affects computing, and how work and computing operate in tandem to affect society. From advances in automation, artificial intelligence, and virtual/extended reality, to the entrenchment of hybrid and remote work arrangements, and<br/>the documented harmful societal impacts that computing work has produced, these changes to computing-work relationships raise concern and opportunities to reimagine these relationships in new ways. CSCW has an opportunity and a responsibility to ensure that the kinds of futures we imagine and enact benefit workers, communities, and future generations. Artistic research is well-positioned<br/>to help us not only understand, but imagine new pathways forward in response to pressing CSCW questions. By hosting a panel of experts in artistic methods well-equipped to help us imagine these futures, we expect to lay the groundwork for mutually respectful cross-disciplinary collaboration between arts and computing<br/>that makes more space in our field for different kinds of thinking, approaches to problems, and new imaginaries.
CSCW Contributions to Critical Futures of Work
2025-10-17
articleMaking Sense of Trauma Over Time: Interweaving Feminist Temporalities to Understand Histories
Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction · 2025-05-02 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorTrauma, an emotional response to events with lasting impacts, is a significant public health issue influencing technology interactions. This paper focuses on the sixth principle of trauma-informed care—Cultural, Historical, and Gender Issues—by exploring multiple timescales of trauma and generational impacts through two ethnographic vignettes: a trauma-informed healthcare design project in Chicago and environmental advocacy in Borneo, Indonesia. We integrate feminist temporality to understand temporal contingencies in cultural contexts to inform future trauma-informed design and computing work. Our contributions include detailed ethnographic accounts that shift the focus from trauma as an individual event to a historically and communally felt phenomenon, advancing CSCW scholarship by incorporating historicist sensibilities and feminist theorizations of temporality.
Recent grants
NSF · $616k · 2015–2023
CHS: Small: The Farm as Lab: Information Technology Innovation in Computational Agriculture
NSF · $499k · 2019–2022
CHS: Medium: Collaborative Research: Regional Experiments for the Future of Work in America
NSF · $590k · 2019–2022
Frequent coauthors
- 118 shared
Jeffrey Bardzell
Pennsylvania State University
- 12 shared
Silvia Lindtner
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 12 shared
Austin L. Toombs
Indiana University Bloomington
- 11 shared
Tyler Pace
Indiana University Bloomington
- 10 shared
Neha Kumar
Georgia Institute of Technology
- 9 shared
Shad Gross
- 9 shared
Nicola J. Bidwell
Rhodes University
- 9 shared
Guo Freeman
Clemson University
Education
- 2002
Ph.D., Human-Computer Interaction
University of California, Berkeley
- 1998
M.S., Computer Science
University of California, Berkeley
- 1996
B.S., Computer Science
University of California, Berkeley
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