15 Facts About Cooperative design

1.

Participatory Cooperative design has been used in many settings and at various scales.

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2.

In several Scandinavian countries, during the 1960s and 1970s, participatory Cooperative design was rooted in work with trade unions; its ancestry includes action research and sociotechnical Cooperative design.

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3.

Co-Cooperative design requires the end user's participation: not only in decision making but in idea generation.

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4.

Participatory Cooperative design has attempted to create a platform for active participation in the Cooperative design process, for end users.

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5.

Participatory design was actually born in Scandinavia and called cooperative design.

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6.

Phrase co-Cooperative design is used in reference to the simultaneous development of interrelated software and hardware systems.

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7.

Politics of Cooperative design have been the concern for many Cooperative design researchers and practitioners.

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8.

Kensing and Blomberg illustrate the main concerns which related to the introduction of new frameworks such as system Cooperative design which related to the introduction of computer-based systems and power dynamics that emerge within the workspace.

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9.

The automation introduced by system Cooperative design has created concerns within unions and workers as it threatened their involvement in production and their ownership over their work situation.

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10.

Participatory Cooperative design has many applications in development and changes to the built environment.

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11.

Public interest Cooperative design is meant to reshape conventional modern architectural practice.

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12.

Solutions to social issues can be addressed in a long-term manner through such Cooperative design, serving the public, and involving it directly in the process through participatory Cooperative design.

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13.

That is why many architects throughout the world are employing participatory Cooperative design and practicing their profession more responsibly, encouraging a wider shift in architectural practice.

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14.

Participatory Cooperative design can be seen as a move of end-users into the world of researchers and developers, whereas empathic Cooperative design can be seen as a move of researchers and developers into the world of end-users.

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15.

Indeed, user-centered Cooperative design is a useful and important construct, but one that suggests that users are taken as centers in the Cooperative design process, consulting with users heavily, but not allowing users to make the decisions, nor empowering users with the tools that the experts use.

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